Trump's corporate targets face tricky
task in fending off his attacks
Send a link to a friend
[June 11, 2016]
By Nick Carey and Emily Stephenson
(Reuters) - As the White House race took
off last summer, food giant Mondelez International found itself in an
unusual position: Republican candidate Donald Trump began delivering
broadsides against one of its iconic products, Oreo cookies.
"Nabisco is closing a factory in Chicago, and they’re moving to
Mexico. No more Oreos. I don’t like Oreos anymore," Trump told a
crowd in New Hampshire on Aug. 14, reacting to reports that Mondelez
was shutting down some production lines at its Nabisco subsidiary in
Chicago while boosting output in Mexico.
Trump's statement that Mondelez was closing a Chicago factory was
erroneous, as the company quickly pointed out, but that didn't stop
him from repeating it.
It's unusual for a top presidential candidate, especially a
representative of the business-friendly Republican Party, to attack
major U.S. corporations by name.
But over the course of his unconventional campaign, Trump has aimed
his fire at a range of companies, mostly for shifting jobs abroad
(Ford Motor Co, United Technologies Corp unit Carrier Corp) but also
for building products in foreign markets (Apple) and for what he
said were violations of antitrust laws (Amazon).
Trump has threatened the companies with boycotts, tariffs, taxes and
other punishments. The Trump campaign declined to comment for this
story.
Some of the companies saw their share prices dip in the wake of
Trump's criticism while others experienced a small boost.
But all of them were presented with a dilemma that's familiar to the
presumptive nominee's many vanquished Republican rivals: Should they
engage with a possible future president known for holding a grudge,
possibly inviting more wrath, or should they lie low and risk
allowing Trump to define them and to push policies they deem
harmful?
Most have sought to stay out of the fray even as Trump has kept up
the drumbeat of criticism.
"I am fighting hard to bring jobs back to the United States Many
companies – like Ford, General Motors, Nabisco, Carrier – are moving
production to Mexico," Trump said this week. This was "bad for all
Americans," he said.
It was the first time Trump included GM in his roster of corporate
wrongdoers, though the Trump campaign later removed GM from the
statement and declined to say why. GM declined comment.
MONDELEZ TREADS CAREFULLY
Mondelez, previously known as Kraft Foods, took a different tack.
After Trump vowed to boycott Oreos, Mondelez fielded numerous media
inquiries and contacted reporters when the company deemed press
coverage of his remarks off base, said Laurie Guzzinati, who
oversees governmental affairs in North America for Mondelez.
The company didn't engage in any Trump-bashing, though Guzzinati
said Trump's comments were "grounded in inaccuracies."
She said she told reporters that Mondelez would continue to make
Oreos in three locations in the United States, countering the
impression Trump may have left that Oreos would no longer be made in
the United States.
Mondelez's response tracks closely what crisis management experts
recommend for Trump-targeted companies.
Hilary Rosen, a managing director for Washington, D.C.,
communications firm SKD Knickerbocker, said her firm was
representing corporate clients who have been singled out by Trump,
though she declined to name them.
Rosen's advice to clients, she said, is "don't depend on educating
Donald Trump on the truth. People have tried and failed."
[to top of second column] |
The logo of Ford is pictured near a sales store of the automaker in
Mexico City, Mexico, April 5, 2016. U.S. Republican presidential
candidate Donald Trump has aimed his fire at a range of companies,
including Ford, mostly for shifting jobs abroad. REUTERS/Edgard
Garrido/File Photo
Rosen, a Democrat, recommends instead that companies make their case
to the journalists who cover Trump, so "Donald Trump does not define
you."
None of the companies targeted by Trump acknowledged hiring outside
consultants to deal with his criticism. Many declined to comment for
this story.
AVOIDING THE MUD
"You're not going to win in a one-on-one confrontation with Donald
Trump. You're just going to get mired in the mud," said Juda
Engelmayer, senior vice president for crisis management at 5W Public
Relations in New York.
Those who have been willing to engage, including Ford Chairman Bill
Ford, have avoided getting too personal.
Trump has railed against Ford for manufacturing vehicles in Mexico,
threatening a tariff of up to 40 percent on "every car, bumper and
part" entering the United States from Mexico.
Ford, the great-grandson of the automaker's founder Henry Ford,
called Trump's critique "distorted" and said the company instead
should be "held up as a real success story."
"We didn't take the (government) bailout," during the 2007-2009
recession, Ford told reporters at a conference in Detroit on May 23,
contrasting his company with GM and Chrysler. "We paid back our
debts. We pulled ourselves up by our boot straps. We are investing
in America."
Crisis management experts said companies targeted by Trump need to
be thinking more about the policy implications of his presidency.
That means, for example, shoring up support in the U.S. Congress for
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which Trump has
said he wants to renegotiate.
A trade lobbyist who asked not to be named because he has worked
with one of the companies Trump has called out said Trump's attacks
do not particularly hurt companies' reputations in Washington,
because policymakers understand presidential campaigns are the
"political silly season."
But, he said, they can impact broader efforts on trade and other
policies. "I think what this suggests," he said, "is that there
needs to be a concentrated effort by the business community to talk
about the benefits of trade."
(Additional reporting by David Shepardson in Washington, Jessica
Toonkel in New York and Joseph White in Detroit; editing by Eric
Effron and Ross Colvin)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |