The Jerusalem Post

Travel ban stirs faint corporate outcry beyond Silicon Valley

- • By DEVIKA KRISHNA KUMAR and ROSS KERBER

NEW YORK/BOSTON (Reuters) – Most US corporate bosses have stayed silent on President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n curbs, underscori­ng the sensitivit­ies around opposing policies that could provoke a backlash from the White House.

While the leaders of Apple Inc., Google and Facebook Inc. emailed their staff to denounce the suspension of the US refugee program and the halting of arrivals from seven Muslim-majority countries, many of their counterpar­ts in other industries either declined comment or responded with company statements reiteratin­g their commitment to diversity.

The difference in response shows the pressure large swathes of corporate America face to avoid tussling publicly with the new administra­tion.

Companies such as aircraft maker Boeing Co. and automakers Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Co. have already had run-ins with Trump over other issues, and they have much at stake in policy decisions that the administra­tion will make on tax, trade and regulatory matters.

Before taking office, Trump attacked Boeing over the cost of the future Air Force One program. Boeing chief executive officer Dennis Muilenburg met with him earlier this month and said he and Trump had made progress on the Air Force One issue and the potential sale of fighter aircraft.

Representa­tives from Boeing, General Motors and Ford declined to comment on Trump’s immigratio­n curbs.

Wall Street, meanwhile, is hoping the new administra­tion will ease some of the regulation­s introduced in the wake of the 2007-08 financial crisis and adopt a lighter touch in their enforcemen­t.

Industries including banking, health care and auto manufactur­ing “see themselves on the cusp of a new era of deregulati­on, and they do not want to do anything that would offend the new emperor,” said Cornelius Hurley, the director of Boston University’s Center for Finance, Law & Policy.

So far, Lloyd Blankfein, the chief executive of Goldman Sachs, is the only major US bank boss to speak out directly against the executive order.

“This is not a policy we support,” Blankfein said in a message sent to staff on Sunday evening. “Being diverse is not optional; it is what we must be.”

Representa­tives of Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Morgan Stanley declined to comment on Trump’s immigratio­n order.

Wells Fargo & Co. said in a statement that it was reviewing the executive order and its implicatio­ns for staff and its business.

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.’s Operating Committee, which includes CEO Jamie Dimon, sent a note to staff saying it was reaching out to all employees affected and noted that the country was “strengthen­ed by the rich diversity of the world around us.”

To be sure, some CEOs were more outspoken.

Nike Inc. CEO Mark Parker said the company did not support the executive order.

“Nike believes in a world where everyone celebrates the power of diversity,” he said in a statement. “Those values are being threatened by the recent executive order in the US banning refugees, as well as visitors, from seven Muslim-majority countries.”

Brent Saunders, CEO of US drugmaker Allergan Plc, tweeted: “Oppose any policy that puts limitation­s on our ability to attract the best & diverse talent.”

But many boardrooms kept quiet. Representa­tives for some energy companies, including Exxon Mobil Corp., for example, declined to comment.

GOOD CORPORATE CITIZENS

As the idea of corporate social responsibi­lity has taken root, so companies have increasing­ly championed a range of causes, including gay rights, diverse workplaces and a global view.

Many in corporate America are still trying to work out how to deal with a new government that takes a more conservati­ve stance on some social issues and has an anti-globalizat­ion platform.

Those non-tech companies that did issue statements over the weekend tended to emphasize their role as good corporate citizens rather than openly criticize Trump’s policies.

Starbucks Corp. CEO Howard Schultz has put the coffee chain in the national spotlight before, asking customers not to bring guns into stores and urging conversati­ons on race relations.

In a letter to employees, he said Starbucks was developing plans to hire 10,000 refugees over five years across dozens of countries. But he did not directly criticize Trump’s order.

“I am hearing the alarm you all are sounding that the civility and human rights we have all taken for granted for so long are under attack,” he wrote.

In his statement, General Electric Co. CEO Jeff Immelt told staff that the company would engage with the US government.

“We will continue to make our voice heard with the new administra­tion and Congress, and reiterate the importance of this issue to GE and to the business community overall,” he wrote.

One of the most immediate ways for corporate bosses to communicat­e with Trump about the immigratio­n order will be the first meeting of his advisory panel of business leaders next week.

Of the 19 leaders on that panel, only two, Elon Musk, who founded Tesla Motors Inc. and SpaceX, and Travis Kalanick, CEO of Uber Technologi­es Inc., have spoken out against Trump’s immigratio­n curbs.

A spokeswoma­n for Stephen Schwarzman, the billionair­e chief executive of Blackstone Group LP whom Trump tasked to set up and chair the panel, declined to comment.

 ?? (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT-ELECT Donald Trump sits with (from left) PayPal cofounder and Facebook board member Peter Thiel, Apple Inc. CEO Tim Cook, Oracle CEO Safra Catz and Tesla CEO Elon Musk during a meeting with technology leaders at Trump Tower in New York...
(Shannon Stapleton/Reuters) US PRESIDENT-ELECT Donald Trump sits with (from left) PayPal cofounder and Facebook board member Peter Thiel, Apple Inc. CEO Tim Cook, Oracle CEO Safra Catz and Tesla CEO Elon Musk during a meeting with technology leaders at Trump Tower in New York...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel