Houston Chronicle

Trump creates a crisis for business empire

- By Max Abelson

It’s right there in the first few pages of “Trump University Branding10­1”: “The truth is, everything yousay and do is important,” he wrote in the 2008 book’s foreword. “Actions matter.”

After egging on a mob that rioted inside the U.S. Capitol last week, the brand that’s at the heart of President Donald Trump’s career and fortune is in crisis.

He’s being shunned by some of the political donors who fuel him, the tech companies that amplify his voice, the banks handling his finances, the American golf industry that brings business to his clubs — even the Canadian company behind his online stores.

It took all four years of Trump’s presidency for most of those corporate allies to turn against him.

Now, they’re standing up to him when their pressure can’t change much about an administra­tion that’s in its final days. But they do have the power to hurt his return to the business world.

“As he’s walking out of the palace gates he’s torching the kingdom, but in doing so he’s permanentl­y damaging his own brand,” said Sally Hogshead, a branding specialist. “There’s a shame factor with being associated with the Trump brand for a larger percentage of the population than before.”

The Trump Organizati­on didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

In a span of a few days, Trump has been rejected by Wall Street, Silicon Valley and Washington.

Internet giants took away his social media megaphone after his posts encouraged violence, with Twitter suspending his personal account and Facebook extending a ban indefinite­ly.

Shopify said it shut down his ecommerce stores, affecting the Trump Organizati­on’s official store and a campaign shop. The firm “does not tolerate actions that incite violence,” a spokeswoma­n said.

Some of the banks that Trump and his family have worked with for years are distancing themselves.

Deutsche Bank AG has decided to refrain from further business with Trump and his company, said a person with knowledge of the matter, asking not to be identified because the deliberati­ons were confidenti­al.

Trump owes the Frankfurtb­ased lender more than $300million.

Signature Bank, the New York lender where Ivanka Trump once served on the board, said it’s cutting ties while it presses for his resignatio­n.

Signature is closing two personal accounts in which Trump held about $5.3 million, said a spokespers­on for the firm. The New York Times reported the bank’s moves earlier on Monday.

Finance firms more broadly say they’ll use thepower of their campaign donations to condemn the politician­s whose attempt to overturn the November presidenti­al election spurred last week’s riot.

In Washington, House lawmakers are on course to try to make Trump the only president in U.S. history to be impeached twice.

Even Trump’s favorite elite bastion is taking its business from him. The PGA of America said its board voted to end an agreement to host next year’ s P GA Championsh­ip at a golf course owned by Trump in New Jersey.

“It’s become clear that conducting the PGA championsh­ip at Trump Bedminster would be detrimenta­l to the PGA of America brand,” Jim Richerson, PGA of America’s president, said in a video message.

When Trump announced his presidency with a speech that said Mexican immigrants include rapists, the PGA decided not to hold its 2015 Grand Slam of Golf at Trump National in Los Angeles.

Trump’s business future isn’t bright, according to Carly Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard, who ran against Trump in the 2016 primaries.

“His brand is toxic,” Fiorina said Monday on Bloomberg Television. “That will have real consequenc­es forh is businesses, evenas perhaps he continues to have support from some in the Republican Party and some in the nation.”

Even so, Trump’s career is a story of stormy falls and improbable rebounds — and his brand may be stronger than ever among the fervent fans he drew to the Capitol.

Supporters said there still would be lucrative opportunit­ies for him in right-wing media, including a possible role at a news channel, his own media venture or a book deal.

“I’ll be the first to admit it’s not always easy,” Trump wrote in the university’s 2008 book on branding. Eight years later, just before moving into the White House, he agreed to pay $25 million to settle claims that the defunct school cheated thousands of students.

Rebecca Horan, a brand strategist, said it’s hard to imagine Trump’s brand “coming back from treasonous actions.”

 ?? Michael Nagle / Bloomberg ?? Donors, banks, golf organizati­ons and online stores are all abandoning President Donald Trump after he incited a mob that trashed the Capitol in rioting blamed for five deaths.
Michael Nagle / Bloomberg Donors, banks, golf organizati­ons and online stores are all abandoning President Donald Trump after he incited a mob that trashed the Capitol in rioting blamed for five deaths.

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