The Week (US)

Trump declares war on Amazon

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It’s been a “remarkable use of the presidenti­al bully pulpit,” said Shear in The New York Times. For much of the past week, President Trump has aggressive­ly attacked Amazon, labeling the nation’s largest e-retailer a “tax cheat and a job killer” and accusing it of profiting at the expense of the U.S. Postal Service. Amazon “pays little or no taxes to state & local government­s,” Trump said in one tweet, adding that it “uses our Postal System as their Delivery Boy (causing tremendous loss to the U.S.)” and has put “thousands” of retailers out of business. People close to the president say he is “obsessed” with Amazon and has hinted that he wants to “use the power of his office” to rein it in. That possibilit­y has “spooked investors,” tanking Amazon’s market value by about $75 billion. The president’s war “is personal,” said Gabriel Sherman in VanityFair.com. He believes that Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who separately owns The Washington Post, uses that paper’s coverage “as a political weapon” against him. It doesn’t matter that Bezos has no newsroom involvemen­t. The president is intent on causing “further damage” to Amazon, perhaps by pressuring the Post Office to increase the company’s shipping costs.

It’s simply “not true” that Amazon is killing the Post Office, said Lisa Marie Segarra in Fortune.com. No less an authority than the Postal Service itself has said it profits from delivering the company’s parcels, especially as revenue from first-class mail has shrunk dramatical­ly in the internet age. Nor is it accurate that Amazon dodges taxes; it now collects a sales tax on its own products in all 45 states that have one. Trump’s right about one thing, though: “Amazon is much too big,” said Damon Linker in TheWeek.com. And its exponentia­l growth, from modest bookseller to $700 billion juggernaut, “has been greatly aided by its avoidance of taxes.” To this day, third-party vendors on the site often do not collect sales tax, and last year, Amazon reportedly paid zero dollars in federal taxes. It has undeniably used its massive size to ruthlessly squeeze competitor­s. Liberals never want to give Trump an inch. But it’s shocking they’ve become “obsequious defenders” of such a rapacious company in the process.

Spare me, said Rich Lowry in the NationalRe­view.com. “There are many scourges in American life. Amazon isn’t one of them.” Its rise has been a boon for consumers, offering more choice and convenienc­e at a lower cost. Yes, Amazon can be “sharpelbow­ed and aggressive,” but nobody “is forced to buy from it.” What’s shocking is that the president would harass such a classic “capitalist success story.” It’s tempting to chalk up these attacks to Trump just being Trump, said Yascha Mounk in Slate.com. But that would be a dangerous miscalcula­tion. For an economy to grow at its full potential, “economic rather than political facts need to determine which companies thrive.” That’s not possible when a would-be strongman “can punish corporatio­ns at will,” especially when it’s an attempt to curb negative coverage of him. Trump’s Amazon rants are a “political scandal of the first order”—and should be treated as such.

 ??  ?? A postal worker sorting Amazon packages
A postal worker sorting Amazon packages

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