The executives who stood by Trump were ultimately among his enablers, bestowing him with the imprimatur of mainstream business credibility and normalizing a president who has turned the country against itself
President Donald Trump at a meeting with business leaders about tax reform in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Oct. 31, 2017. From the start of Trump’s presidency, corporate America has vacillated between supporting his economic agenda and condemning his worst impulses. Image: Doug Mills/The New York Times
Big business struck a Faustian bargain with President Donald Trump.
When he said something incendiary or flirted with authoritarianism, high-minded chief executives would issue vague, moralizing statements and try to distance themselves from a pro-business president who coveted their approval.
But when Trump cut taxes, rolled back onerous regulations or used them as props for a photo op, they would applaud his leadership and grin for the cameras.
After Wednesday’s events on Capitol Hill, the true cost of that balancing act was plain to see, even through the tear gas wafting in the rotunda.
The executives who stood by Trump were ultimately among his enablers, bestowing him with the imprimatur of mainstream business credibility and normalizing a president who has turned the country against itself.
©2019 New York Times News Service