USA TODAY US Edition

Trump tweet blasts Bezos, Amazon

Says e-commerce giant doing ‘great damage’ to retailers

- Roger Yu @ByRogerYu

President Trump on Wednesday renewed his attack on Amazon, tweeting the e-commerce giant is “doing great damage to tax paying retailers” and removing jobs in cities.

Amazon, which employs about 180,000 in the U.S. and has plans to finish hiring 100,000 more fulland part-time jobs by mid-2018, couldn’t be reached for comment.

Trump’s blistering tweet, his first of the day, was issued hours after The Washington Post — the newspaper owned by Amazon chairman Jeff Bezos — ran an editorial with the headline, “Mr. Trump gives comfort to racists.”

Many brick-and-mortar retailers are struggling to boost sales as customers increasing­ly turn to ecommerce sources, particular­ly Amazon, and they’ve been open about the difficult competitiv­e environmen­t. Several retailers, including The Limited, True Religion and Payless ShoeSource, have declared bankruptcy this year.

The Post has been aggressive in covering Trump and the White House, breaking several impactful stories this year. The paper and other national media outlets have been at the receiving end of the president’s constant attacks — on Twitter and in encounters with reporters — on what he considers to be “fake news.”

Using the hashtag #AmazonWash­ingtonPost, Trump tweeted in June that the paper was “the guardian of Amazon not paying internet taxes (which they should).”

The latest feud adds another wrinkle to Trump’s increasing­ly fractured relationsh­ip with Corporate America. Scores of chief executives who served on Trump’s advisory councils (two have been disbanded) spoke out against the displays of racism and violence at the white nationalis­ts’ rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., over the weekend after Trump initially failed to directly censure the spe- cific hate groups involved.

Several chief execs on Trump’s manufactur­ing jobs council — Merck, Intel, Under Armour, 3M, Campbell’s, the AFL-CIO and Alliance for American Manufactur­ing — resigned this week.

Facing pressure over his initial response that blamed “many sides” for violence in Charlottes- ville, Trump read a statement late Monday that criticized the hate groups, including neo-Nazis and the KKK.

But he seemed to retreat from the position Tuesday. Returning to his combative form, Trump chastised counterpro­testers and renewed criticism that he was reverting to the moral equivalenc­y that triggered so much ire since Saturday’s events.

“What about the alt-left?” Trump said. “What about the fact they came charging? That they came charging with clubs in their hands, swinging clubs? Do they have any problem? I think they do.”

Still, the “Amazon effect” on retail is real, executives and analysts say. Beyond selling books, electronic­s and gadgets online, Amazon has serious brick-andmortar ambitions as well. Two months ago, Amazon agreed to buy Whole Foods for more than

$13.4 billion, a deal that will be closely reviewed by antitrust regulators.

U.S. apparel sales totaled about

$200 billion last year, up about

3%, according to One Click Retail. Amazon captured about $3.4 billion of the total. But with a 25% apparel sales increase, it far outpaced other retailers.

On its website, Amazon says it collects sales tax on items shipped to 45 states and Washington, D.C. Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire and Oregon have no statewide sales tax.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A, GETTY IMAGES ?? From left, President Trump, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos attend a meeting of the American Technology Council on June 19 at the White House.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A, GETTY IMAGES From left, President Trump, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos attend a meeting of the American Technology Council on June 19 at the White House.

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