The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Execs shunned Trump panels before he disbanded them

- By Josh Boak AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump had pushed many of America’s top corporate leaders to the breaking point with his inability to decisively condemn white supremacis­ts — so they huddled on an 11:30 a.m. conference call Wednesday.

The frustrated members of the White House policy forum — which included executives from General Electric, Wal-Mart, General Motors, Boeing, IBM and JP Morgan Chase — chose to dissolve their advisory panel. The White House was then phoned and Trump agreed that it was the right course of action, according to four people familiar with the talks who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons.

It was a shocking setback for Trump. The president had reveled in his ability to draw billionair­es and corporate titans into the Oval Office, where he touted deals to invest in factories and add factory jobs. But by equating the white supremacis­ts whose actions led to deadly violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia to a group of counter-protesters, Trump had already inflicted damage on his manufactur­ing jobs council — which had seven departures by Wednesday morning.

So after learning about this latest loss of confidence by his former strategic and policy forum, Trump tried to put a more favorable spin on the defections.

He fired off a tweet Wednesday saying that he chose to disband his strategy forum and manufactur­ing jobs panel, “rather than putting pressure” on CEOs to stay. “Thank you all!” the president wrote.

The alliance with the White House forged in hopes of overhaulin­g the tax code, cutting regulation­s and jumpstarti­ng new infrastruc­ture investment­s had turned into a risk for corporate leaders. For those CEOs with shared policy aims, Trump’s recent statements were distractio­ns that risked alienat-

ing employees and customers in an increasing­ly diverse United States.

“It is a leader’s role, in business or government, to bring people together, not tear them apart,” said Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, in a statement. Dimon also chairs the Business Roundtable, an associatio­n of CEOs, that recently launched a multimilli­on dollar advertisin­g campaign in support of Trump’s calls to cut corporate and personal tax rates.

GE’s chairman Jeffrey Immelt called the president’s remarks “deeply troubling.” The “ongoing tone” had made it difficult to foster policies that help economic growth, he said.

Companies were facing pressure on social media to denounce the president and resign from the White House advisory boards, while companies that had already cut ties were facing

possible boycotts from Trump supporters. Only by acting together and having those panels disbanded would they be able to avoid harsher scrutiny not just from the public but also from a president with a track record of blasting individual companies that cross him on Twitter.

“The problem was it was quickly becoming a litmus test for companies, CEOs and brands,” said Timothy Calkins, a professor of marketing at Northweste­rn University. “This move takes away that issue — because it allows everyone to back away without being seen as backing away.”

After Trump’s initial equivocati­ng on Saturday about protests that stemmed from a planned removal of a Confederat­e statute, executives began to leave his manufactur­ing and jobs council. First was Merck, then Under Armour and Intel, followed by the Alliance for American Manufactur­ing and the AFL-CIO.

But many companies among the 28 represente­d on the panel sent out statements

saying they believed it was important to engage with the White House.

Then Trump, for the second time, on Tuesday afternoon suggested that there was little difference between the actions of white supremacis­ts groups and those protesting them in Virginia.

“There is blame on both sides,” he said, saying that any of the previous departures were due to companies being embarrasse­d about making goods overseas.

Shortly after those remarks on Tuesday, a precaution­ary statement was drafted to disband the strategic and policy forum by Stephen Schwarzman, chair of the group and head of the investment firm Blackstone. The statement was adopted by the members of the forum on Wednesday morning as part of the decision to dissolve. The statement said they support “an inclusive pro-growth agenda” but that the debate about their relationsh­ip with the White House had become a “distractio­n.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Campbell Soup CEO Denise Morrison speaks Feb. 23 during a meeting between President Donald Trump and manufactur­ing executives at the White House in Washington. Morrison resigned from a White House jobs panel over comments about racism made by President...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Campbell Soup CEO Denise Morrison speaks Feb. 23 during a meeting between President Donald Trump and manufactur­ing executives at the White House in Washington. Morrison resigned from a White House jobs panel over comments about racism made by President...

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