Just a day earlier, Mr Trump
called the CEOs leaving his panels 'grandstanders'
Donald Trump has disbanded
two key business advisory councils after a number of CEOs quit in protest over
his defiant and increasingly mixed response to the violence at the
Charlottesville protests.
"Rather than putting
pressure on the businesspeople of the Manufacturing Council & Strategy
& Policy Forum, I am ending both," Mr Trump wrote on Twitter.
"Thank you all!"
Before that announcement was
made, the councils were haemorrhaging CEOs. Earlier in the day, the CEO of
Campbell Soup, Denise Morrison – who sat on the Manufacturing Council – had
distanced her company from the White House, following less than an hour after
3M Chief Executive Inge Thulin announced he was also leaving his post on the
same council and ditching Mr Trump. Those two followed in the footsteps of the
CEOs of Merck, Under Armour, and Intel. Two leaders from the AFL-CIO and the
president of a manufacturing industry group were also among those to leave the
councils.
"Racism and murder are
unequivocally reprehensible and are not morally equivalent to anything else
that happened in Charlottesville," Ms Morrison said upon her departure
from the Manufacturing Council. "I believe the President should have been
- and still needs to be - unambiguous on that point."
The resignations from the
council came after Mr Trump refused to condemn white supremacists who conducted
a rally in Charlottesville over the weekend – ostensibly to protest the removal
of a Confederate statue – that descended into violence and led to the death of
a counter protester when a car was driven at a crowd. There were 19 others who
were injured by the vehicle, while the alleged driver has been charged with
second-degree murder and a number of other charges.
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by Taboola
Before Mr Trump's
announcement of the disbandment, the Strategy and Policy Forum announced it was
a joint decision to disband the council.
“We believe the debate over
forum participation has become a distraction from our well-intentioned and
sincere desire to aid vital policy discussions on how to improve the lives of
everyday Americans,' the group's statement read.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon released
a separate statement saying he strongly disagreed with Mr Trump's recent
statements, adding that “fanning divisiveness is not the answer”.
“Constructive economic and
regulatory policies are not enough and will not matter if we do not address the
divisions in our country. It is a leader's role, in business or government, to
bring people together, not tear them apart,” he said.
In the wake of the violence
on Saturday, Mr Trump condemned the "display of hatred, bigotry and
violence on many sides." Amid mounting criticism, the White then released
a further statement on Sunday, attributed to a spokesperson, that said:
"The President said very strongly in his statement yesterday that he
condemns all forms of violence, bigotry, and hatred... Of course that includes
white supremacists, KKK Neo-Nazi and all extremist groups."
Seemingly bowing to further
pressure to denounce white nationalist groups directly, Mr Trump branded the
white supremacists who take part in violence as “criminals and thugs” and
called racism "evil" in a statement at the White House on Monday.
However, the President again
rowed back on those comments on Tuesday, seemingly leaving his staff stunned.
"I think there's blame
on both sides," Mr Trump said in a press conference in which he went off
script to talk about the reaction to
Reports surfaced following
the statement on Tuesday that White House staff and advisers weren't aware that
the President was going to address the issue, and had instead been scheduled to
only speak about his infrastructure executive order – the purpose for the
gathering of the press - which he said would eliminate red tape for
construction in the United States.
Following the remarks, some
in the administration are pondering what it might mean if top-level White House
officials began abandoning Mr Trump as well.
"If you have some
high-profile individuals leaving, you may have a whole host of high-profile
individuals leaving," an anonymous source told Reuters.
Just a day before disbanding
the two councils, Mr Trump also appeared defiant about the slew of resignations
he was receiving.
"For every CEO that
drops out of the Manufacturing Council, I have many to take their place,"
he tweeted. "Grandstanders should not have gone on. JOBS!"
Mr Trump set up the advisory
council in January to much fanfare, toting his career as a successful
businessman before running for president as one of his prime qualifications to
run the country. Mr Trump promised then that he would seek out the advice of
business leaders in the pursuit of a stronger economy that creates jobs and
boosts America's wealth.
But the council began seeing
troubles fairly quickly, when the high-profile tech entrepreneur Elon Musk
resigned from the advisory board in protest of Mr Trump's decision to pull the
United States out of the Paris climate accord. Mr Musk is the CEO and founder
of companies including Tesla and SpaceX.
"Leaving Paris is not
good for America or the world," Mr Musk tweeted at the time.
Still, the President
contends that things have been pretty good for business since he took over the
Oval Office. He regularly notes that the stock market has repeatedly hit
all-time highs under his oversight, and complains that the news media doesn't
cover that fact. Meanwhile, observers note that the stock market has hit
all-time highs in 30 of the last 54 months
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