The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Corporate chiefs flee Trump; he disbands WH advisory panels

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With corporate chieftains fleeing, President Donald Trump abruptly abolished their White House business councils on Wednesday — the latest fallout from his combative comments on racially charged violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

In a face-saving effort, he tweeted from Trump Tower in New York: “Rather than putting pressure on the businesspe­ople of the Manufactur­ing Council & Strategy & Policy Forum, I am ending both. Thank you all!”

A growing number of business leaders have been resigning from the advisory panels, openly expressing their displeasur­e with Trump’s comments, including his insistence that “both sides” were to blame for weekend violence that left one woman dead and led to a helicopter crash that killed two state troopers.

On Wednesday, Denise Morrison, chief executive of Campbell Soup, declared she was leaving Trump’s manufactur­ing council, saying, “The president should have been — and still needs to be — unambiguou­s” in denouncing the white supremacis­ts who organized the Charlottes­ville rally.

CEOs began tendering their resignatio­ns from White House councils after Trump’s first comments on Saturday after the violence. The first to step down, Kenneth Frazier of Merck, drew a Twitter tongue-lashing from the president. Then, barely 24 hours before disbanding the councils, Trump called those who were leaving “grandstand­ers” and insisted many others were eager to take their places.

A few fellow Republican leaders are going after Trump, too.

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham said Wednesday the president “took a step backward by again suggesting there is moral equivalenc­y” between the marching white supremacis­ts

and the people who had been demonstrat­ing against them.

Former GOP presidenti­al candidate Mitt Romney tweeted a similar slap shortly after the president’s explosive press conference on Tuesday: “No, not the same. One side is racist, bigoted, Nazi. The other opposes racism and bigotry. Morally different universes.”

Other leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan, made forceful anti-racism statements — but steered clear of mentioning Trump and his comments.

Under pressure, Trump made his condemnati­on of the Charlottes­ville violence

more specific on Monday, naming white supremacis­ts, the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis. But he returned to his defiant self on Tuesday, effectivel­y erasing the statement he’d read a day earlier.

In a raucous press conference in the lobby of his skyscraper, he said there were “some very bad people”

among those who gathered to protest Saturday. But he added: “You also had people that were very fine people, on both sides.”

Publicly criticizin­g the president and resigning from his councils is a significan­t step for big-name corporate leaders. Though the policy influence of such advisory groups is sometimes

questionab­le, simply meeting with Trump with TV cameras going is valuable face-time for the executives — and for the president.

After his latest tweets, Trump left New York for his New Jersey golf club where he was scheduled to remain out of public view for the rest of the day.

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