Many CEOs fear a second Trump term would be worse than the first
Though they will only say so in private
When Donald Trump left office three years ago, still huffing, puffing and plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, the leaders of most of America’s biggest corporations were only too happy to see the back of him. They wore their moral outrage like a badge of honour. True, they had conveniently put aside their earlier scruples about Mr Trump’s suitability for the White House, bought off by generous corporate and personal tax cuts in 2017. True, many had cravenly turned a blind eye to his torching of environmental rules in support of a broad-brush regulatory bonfire. But his attempts to subvert American democracy, and the storming of the Capitol by his supporters on January 6th 2021, were a step too far.
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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Duck and cover”
Business January 20th 2024
- Many CEOs fear a second Trump term would be worse than the first
- Donald Trump’s populism is turning off corporate donors
- Donald Trump’s tax cuts would add to American growth—and debt
- The bosses of OpenAI and Microsoft talk to The Economist
- China may be losing its sway over Taiwanese business
- Companies run to their own annual rhythms
- Can Arc’teryx’s owner revive Chinese IPOs in America?
- A $35bn mega-merger strengthens a quiet chip duopoly
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