Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump brand is now facing an urgent reckoning

- By Eric Lipton, Ben Protess and Steve Eder

In the span of four days, President Donald Trump’s family business has lost its online store, the buzz from Trump’s promotiona­l tweets about its luxury resorts and bragging rights as host to one of the world’s most prestigiou­s golf tournament­s.

The mob attack on Congress last week by Trump’s supporters has spurred a reckoning for the Trump Organizati­on by businesses and institutio­ns, at a scale far greater than his previous polarizing actions.

And the Trump brand, premised on gold-plated luxury and a super-affluent clientele, may not fully recover from the fallout of his supporters violently storming and vandalizin­g the U.S. Capitol, hospitalit­y analysts say and some people close to the business acknowledg­e. Other companies linked with the Trumps, including Deutsche Bank, the president’s largest lender, and Signature Bank, are also seeking distance from him and his business.

The backlash is part of a broader shunning of Trump and his allies unfolding in the wake of the deadly assault on the Capitol. Schools stripped the president of honorary degrees, some prominent Republican­s threatened to leave the party and the New York state Bar Associatio­n announced it had begun investigat­ing Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, which could lead to his removal from the group.

As House Democrats introduced an article of impeachmen­t Monday, more than a dozen big businesses vowed to withhold certain political donations. Coca-cola said it would pause donations from its political action committee, saying in a statement that “these events will long be remembered and will factor into our future contributi­on decisions.” Marriott, the giant hotel chain, said it would pause donations from its political action committee “to those who voted against certificat­ion of the election,” a reference to the congressio­nal Republican­s who joined Trump’s false claims of election fraud. Morgan Stanley and AT&T said they, too, would suspend contributi­ons to those lawmakers.

The Trump Organizati­on had already been facing considerab­le financial challenges. Many of its golf and resort properties had been losing money, and the pandemic had forced it to close some restaurant­s and bars and dras

tically reduce hotel occupancy, including at its hotel a few blocks from the White House. And with more than $300 million in debt coming due in the next few years that the president has personally guaranteed, there had been some urgency for the company to line up new deals.

While such an array of challenges would spell doom for just about any hospitalit­y brand, executives of the Trump Organizati­on said they planned on cashing in on Trump’s global fame with overseas branding deals.

“There has never been a political figure with more support or energy behind them than my father,” Eric Trump, the president’s son, who helps run the family business, said in a statement Monday.

The family is also already considerin­g starting a media outfit that would cater to Donald Trump’s tens of millions of supporters, an effort that gained some urgency last week when Twitter and Facebook barred the president from their platforms.

“There will be no shortage of incredible opportunit­ies in real estate and beyond,” Eric Trump said.

Before becoming president, Donald Trump had cycled through many lines of business, including casinos, an airline and reality television. Some ventures were wildly successful, while others were colossal failures. But they revealed his ability to camouflage his wares and capitalize on opportunit­ies, even when his name appeared irreparabl­y tarnished.

This time, the challenges are steeper. The fallout began Thursday, when e-commerce provider Shopify said it had terminated online stores affiliated with the president.

The biggest blow came Sunday, when the PGA of America announced it would strip Trump’s New Jersey golf club of a major tournament.

Trump was said to be “gutted” by the PGA decision, according to a person close to the White House, as he had worked personally for years to push the tournament executives to stage events at his courses.

In a statement that hinted at a potential legal challenge, the Trump Organizati­on called the decision “a breach of a binding contract,” adding that “they have no right to terminate the agreement.”

The PGA Championsh­ip, scheduled for May 2022, was the ultimate golf-world trophy for the Trump brand, which over the last two decades has assembled an internatio­nal collection of golf courses and resorts that now collective­ly represent about a third of the company’s revenue, according to the most recent financial disclosure report.

The tournament itself is not a major source of profit, but hosting an internatio­nally recognized event is enormously valuable for marketing. It also would have bestowed greater legitimacy on Trump and his brand, which includes 16 golf clubs around the world.

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

The damage is expected to continue as various companies and industries reassess their relationsh­ip with Trump and his family business.

Trump’s hotels, like the Trump National Doral near Miami, had already lost many of the major corporate conference­s after he made disparagin­g remarks about Muslims and Mexicans, among others, during his first presidenti­al campaign, and his comments after a deadly rally in 2017 by white supremacis­ts in Charlottes­ville, Va., suggesting that “there is blame on both sides.”

But the fallout from the attacks last week will be steeper and longer lasting, analysts and people familiar with the company said. Some members of the president’s golf clubs are reassessin­g whether to keep their membership­s because of possible protests and vandalism, one of the people said.

David Sangree, a hotel industry consultant from Ohio, said that Trump’s role in the attack on the Capitol would further undermine the company’s efforts to appeal to affluent customers who were not Trump supporters.

“This is a big negative,” Sangree said. “There’s no question they’re going to lose more events because many groups are saying, ‘We don’t want to be associated with this brand.’”

That became even clearer Monday night when New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick said he would refuse the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom because of the “tragic events of last week.” The president had planned to give Belichick the award Thursday.

Even plans to launch a Trump media platform will face obstacles. If Trump seeks to forge a new conservati­ve news network, or join an existing one like OAN or Newsmax, corporate advertiser­s are hardly guaranteed to support him.

“There’s only so much that My Pillow guy can subsidize,” said Jon Klein, the former president of CNN U.S., referring to Mike Lindell, the chief executive of My Pillow who is an outspoken supporter of the president. “It’s suddenly a lot more daunting a propositio­n than it was a week ago for OAN and Newsmax.”

As his presidency ends, Trump is returning to a far different business than the one he ran when he took office.

Several hotel properties that carried his name have been erased from the portfolio, including ones in New York, Panama and Toronto. Plans for two new budget-friendly hotel lines, once a priority, have been indefinite­ly shelved. And a product branding windfall, which led Trump to endorse an array of items from steaks to mattresses, has dwindled.

The company also faces a criminal investigat­ion from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, which is examining whether the president and his company committed any financial or tax crimes in recent years.

Leaving the White House, however, means that Trump will no longer face ethical restrictio­ns like bans on internatio­nal deals, potentiall­y opening new business possibilit­ies. The company could look for new deals in places where company executives believe Trump remains popular, such as Brazil, Argentina, Israel, Saudi Arabia and India. Trump could also hit the speaking circuit, collecting large payments for each appearance, a company executive said.

In Miami, at Trump National Doral, the bar was busy at happy hour Friday, as was the members-only clubhouse, with customers overheard talking both about golf games and business deals, almost none of them wearing masks.

Marion Mccarthy and her husband, Donald, were having drinks there — where they have been members for decades. Dozens of other guests were arriving at the resort for the U.S. Am Tour, which drew more than 100 players, according to one scorecard, which added “Doral Amateur is SOLD OUT!!!!”

“What we are seeing is an overreacti­on,” Donald Mccarthy said. “Once he is out of office, I think he will be able to come down here and play a little more golf.”

 ?? JASON ANDREW / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A Trump 2020 scarf sits on the ground outside of the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Thursday, a day after the president’s supporters stormed the building. Companies and institutio­ns are shunning President Donald Trump, the Trump brand and some associates after the attack on the Capitol.
JASON ANDREW / THE NEW YORK TIMES A Trump 2020 scarf sits on the ground outside of the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Thursday, a day after the president’s supporters stormed the building. Companies and institutio­ns are shunning President Donald Trump, the Trump brand and some associates after the attack on the Capitol.

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