Times Colonist

Ivanka Trump scuttles clothing company

Highly polarized brand goes way of other Trump entities

- MATTHEW BOYLE, LINDSEY RUPP and KIM BHASIN

NEW YORK — Ivanka Trump, the U.S. president’s daughter, is pulling the plug on Ivanka Trump, the purveyor of women’s fashion.

After a year and a half of sporadic controvers­y over potential conflicts of interest, Trump, a White House adviser, said Tuesday that she would wind down the company. She made the decision after some big-name department stores dropped her brand, but said in an emailed statement she did it as a mercy to her employees.

“I do not know when or if I will ever return to the business, but I do know that my focus for the foreseeabl­e future will be the work I am doing here in Washington, so making this decision now is the only fair outcome for my team and partners,” Trump said in an emailed statement.

The brand depended on Ivanka Trump as a symbol of aspiration and possibilit­y, selling dresses, shoes and accessorie­s meant to signal confidence without pushing fashion’s envelope. But politics brought scrutiny. Most of her products were made overseas even as President Donald Trump decried outsourcin­g and threw up tariffs meant to keep jobs at home. China granted the company trademarks, bringing accusation­s of favoritism and emoluments. In the end, the company will join a long list of defunct Trump enterprise­s, including casinos, magazines, steaks and ill-fated Trump University.

“Views on the brand have become highly polarized and it has become a lightning rod for protests and boycotts,” Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, said in a statement. “While the company is still viable, doing business has become far more challengin­g and these problems will only increase.”

Trump launched her fine jewelry brand in 2007, adding footwear in 2010 and handbags the following year. The company expanded into apparel in 2013 and outerwear, eyewear and fragrances one year later. By 2016, there was denim, activewear, fashion jewelry and even baby bedding. Much was made by Marc Fisher Footwear and G-III Apparel Group Ltd., which also makes the Donna Karan and Karl Lagerfeld brands.

In March 2017, Trump was named an adviser to the president, taking no salary and leaving the business in the hands of a caretaker. According to her Facebook page, she focuses on “job creation, economic empowermen­t, workforce developmen­t and entreprene­urship.”

Her role hasn’t been clearly defined, although she’s expressed interest in family leave and was prominent in discussion­s about the tax system. She attended the W-20 women’s summit in April 2017 and led a U.S. delegation to India in support of women’s entreprene­urship.

As her identifica­tion with the administra­tion grew, her business waned. T.J. Maxx last year told employees to eliminate Ivanka Trump signs in its stores. Some retailers pulled merchandis­e from their websites while continuing to sell them in stores, downplayin­g the brand while avoiding the ire of activists and labour-rights groups that said Chinese workers that made the goods were underpaid and underprote­cted.

When Nordstrom Inc. in February 2017 said it would stop selling the line, President Trump said on his personal Twitter account that his daughter was being treated unfairly. This month, Hudson’s Bay Co. said that it would stop selling the goods at its Canadian namesake stores, citing slow sales.

After the breakup with Nordstrom, Ivanka Trump’s brand began to target shoppers directly. In late 2017, it started to sell handbags on its website and opened a small accessorie­s store in the lobby of New York’s Trump Tower. This year, it began to allow shoppers to order apparel from a website.

The brand tried to boost sales overseas, where it had struggled to find customers. But the same day her brand won approval for three new trademarks in China, Ivanka Trump was seated next to Chinese President Xi Jinping at a dinner.

Norman Eisen, a fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington, said closing down the business can’t remove the ethical taint. “She still maintains other business ties such as her trademarks,” he said in an interview. “And it’s just as likely the reason for this is that people have pivoted away from her brand.”

“I would have welcomed this decision if it came 18 months ago, but at this point it’s difficult to be too enthusiast­ic. As usual with the Trumps, there is much less than meets the eye.”

In the end, the company couldn’t escape the fundamenta­l question posed to Ivanka Trump last year at a panel of women entreprene­urs: “What is your role, and who are you representi­ng, your father as president of the United States, the American people, or your business?”

 ??  ?? “Making the decision now is the only fair outcome for my team and partners,” says Ivanka Trump.
“Making the decision now is the only fair outcome for my team and partners,” says Ivanka Trump.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada