Houston Chronicle

Trump’s Goldman Sachs era is in retreat

- By Catherine Lucey

WASHINGTON — Has President Donald Trump’s romance with the Goldman Sachs crowd gone cold?

Economic adviser Gary Cohn is only the latest Goldman figure to head for the White House exits, suggesting the influence of the oh-so-establishm­ent banking powerhouse has been overwhelme­d by the West Wing’s more nationalis­tic voices.

Cohn, Goldman’s former president, announced his resignatio­n this week after an unsuccessf­ul effort to block Trump from imposing new tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

Trump threw Cohn a laurel on the way out, saying, “He may be a globalist, but I still like him.”

But there was plenty of skepticism about Trump’s relationsh­ip with the big-name bank from the start.

“I think we all knew this was coming to an end someday,” said Barry Bennett, a former Trump campaign aide.

It’s not that Trump’s views have changed, Bennett added, but that “people gave up trying to change him.”

Cohn is the fourth high-profile Goldman alumni to leave. He was preceded earlier this year by Dina Powell, former deputy national security adviser, who is returning to Goldman.

In August, onetime chief strategist Steve Bannon said farewell. And in July, after just 11 days as communicat­ions director, Anthony Scaramucci was out the door.

That leaves Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin as the last Goldman veteran holding a top administra­tion job.

Of course, handing big jobs to Goldman alumni is an Oval Office tradition. The influentia­l bank has produced Treasury secretarie­s, White House chiefs of staff and top economic advisers in both Republican and Democratic administra­tions. But Trump’s reliance on Goldman talent was a surprise to some, given his anti-Wall Street campaign rhetoric.

On the campaign trail, Trump suggested Wall Street was getting “away with murder.” He argued that he would not be beholden to bankers, saying that Democrat Hillary Clinton’s ties to the industry meant that she’d never advance financial reform. And he promoted himself as a champion for the “forgotten men and women” left behind in a growing economy.

Trump also specifical­ly attacked his opponents over their ties to Goldman, lambasting rival Ted Cruz because the senator’s wife worked for the bank. He slammed Clinton for taking big speaking fees from the firm.

“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.”

But, for all that, Trump seemed to enjoy the prestige of hiring Goldman talent, says William Cohan, author of “Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World.”

“I think Donald Trump wanted these Goldman people as a way to stroke his own ego. Don’t forget that Goldman never wanted to do business with Donald Trump,” Cohan said, adding that it was a way for Trump to say, “Ha-ha, now I’ve got some of your best people working for me.”

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