Texarkana Gazette

Trump deepens Goldman Sachs ties on economic team

As usual, Wall Street executives picked for influentia­l posts

- By Julie Pace

WASHINGTON—In the heat of the presidenti­al campaign, Donald Trump accused primary rival Ted Cruz of being controlled by Goldman Sachs because his wife, Heidi, previously worked for the Wall Street giant. He slammed Hillary Clinton for receiving speaking fees from the bank.

“I know the guys at Goldman Sachs. They have total, total control over him,” Trump said of Cruz. “Just like they have total control over Hillary Clinton.”

Now, Trump is putting Goldman executives at the helm of his administra­tion’s economic team. He’s expected to name bank president Gary Cohn to an influentia­l White House policy post, according to two people informed of the decision, and has already nominated former Goldman executive Steve Mnuchin to lead the Treasury Department. Steve Bannon, Trump’s incoming White House senior adviser, also worked at Goldman before becoming a conservati­ve media executive.

Wall Street executives have long wielded influence in Washington, filling top jobs in both Republican and Democratic administra­tions. Goldman Sachs itself has produced several Treasury secretarie­s, White House chiefs of staff and top economic advisers.

But the financial industry’s high-level presence in Trump’s burgeoning administra­tion runs counter to some core campaign messages that energized his supporters.

Trump repeatedly warned that Clinton’s Wall Street ties—the Democrat gave paid speeches to Goldman and other banks— meant she would never reform the financial industry. He promised that he would “drain the swamp” in Washington, a city he painted as beholden to financial and political special interests. And he cast himself as a champion for working-class people who watched the big banks grow wealthier after a government bailout, but haven’t seen the effects of an improving economy in their own lives.

“I’m not going to let Wall Street get away with murder,” Trump told voters in Iowa. “Wall Street has caused tremendous problems for us.”

To Democrats, the fact that Trump is now plucking advisers from Wall Street smacks of hypocrisy.

“Everyone who voted for Trump, who thought he’d defend working people, pay attention to the reality of what he’s doing, not just his rhetoric,” said Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who railed against Wall Street’s influence in Washington when he ran against Clinton in the Democratic primary.

The concentrat­ion of power among so many players who once worked at Goldman is sure to feed suspicions of a government at the service of Wall Street. Goldman was involved in the securities market for subprime mortgages, the same financial instrument­s that helped fuel the housing bubble and ultimately led millions of Americans to lose their homes to foreclosur­e.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Goldman Sachs Chief Operating Officer Gary Cohn talks on his phone Nov. 29 as he waits for the start of a meeting with Presidente­lect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York. Trump is expected to pick Cohn to lead the White House National Economic...
Associated Press Goldman Sachs Chief Operating Officer Gary Cohn talks on his phone Nov. 29 as he waits for the start of a meeting with Presidente­lect Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York. Trump is expected to pick Cohn to lead the White House National Economic...

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