'It's like kumbaya:'
Trump's genial private meetings with CEOs jar with
public attacks
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[March 08, 2017]
By Ginger Gibson and David Shepardson
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - When the bosses of some of the world's largest
pharmaceutical companies headed to Washington in January to meet U.S.
President Donald Trump, it had all the makings of a potentially hostile
meeting.
Just weeks before, Trump had sent drug stock prices plummeting after
accusing the companies of "getting away with murder" by charging too
much for medicines.
But the Trump who greeted chief executives of Johnson & Johnson,
Novartis, Merck, Eli Lilly, Celgene and Amgen on Jan. 31 was a
surprisingly genial host who even gave them a personal tour of the Oval
Office, according to several participants in the breakfast.
“There is no question that it was better than it could have been or we
thought it could be," said one industry insider familiar with the
meeting.
Trump did not repeat his public attacks on the industry. Instead, he
focused on "outdated" regulations that drive costs up for drugmakers,
according to participants interviewed by Reuters. The CEOs left with
Trump's word that he would streamline regulations and reform the high
U.S. corporate tax rate.
Since taking office on Jan. 20, Trump has held at least nine meetings
with groups of business leaders, including automakers, airlines,
retailers and health insurers. In early morning or late-night tweets and
in speeches, Trump has lambasted many of these companies for cost
over-runs, or high prices, or foreign manufacturing, often knocking down
their share prices. (See the effects of Trump's tweets on stock prices
here http://tmsnrt.rs/2ibdFSF)
But Reuters interviews with nearly a dozen executives and lobbyists who
have taken part in these meetings or have been briefed on them reveal a
Trump who is very different from his uncompromising and demanding @realDonaldTrump
Twitter handle.
When he meets the nation's top chief executives in person, he is a mix
of charm and cajoling. This Trump is flexible and inquisitive, a
schmoozer who remembers birthdays and often lavishes praise on their
companies, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity so they
could freely discuss private meetings.
This private side of Trump sheds light on why many CEOs have expressed
confidence that the Republican president is good for business, despite
his share-denting public attacks. As recently as Tuesday, Trump tweeted
he was working on a system to increase competition in the health
industry and lower drug pricing, sending pharma shares lower.
In the White House meetings, Trump focuses much of his talk on cutting
regulations, the sources said, underscoring one of his administration's
key priorities - getting rid of rules imposed by his predecessor Barack
Obama. He typically asks which regulations are holding businesses back
from adding new jobs and promises to resolve the issues, executives say.
"He said one thing for the cameras and the door shuts and then it's like
kumbaya," said one person who was briefed on a meeting between Trump and
a group of CEOs.
"He likes to be seen as engaging and buddy buddy with other big
important business leaders," said this person.
A former businessman, Trump runs his closed-door meetings with CEOs as
if they were a corporate board meeting, attendees said. In contrast to
his doctrinaire tweets, he likes to seek input from everyone at the
table, and compared to former presidents Barack Obama and George W.
Bush, conversations are less scripted.
Trump’s approach to these meetings is “one of listening and not
lecturing”, said a senior White House official who has participated in
industry meetings. “I’ve seen a president who is listening and asking
questions to get to how he can create a thriving economy,” the official
said.
An Amgen spokeswoman said Trump made it clear that he wanted to work
with the company on U.S. job creation and biotech innovation.
Representatives of the other drugmakers declined to comment.
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U.S. President Donald Trump meets with pharmaceutical industry
representatives at the White House in Washington, U.S. on January
31, 2017. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
SHOWING OFF THE DRAPES
Because so little is known about how Trump interacts privately with CEOs, trade
groups and company officials have begun to swap tips on how to approach their
meetings with him.
“There is this undercurrent of information sharing about what to expect, what to
do,” said one trade group official who prepared CEOs for a recent meeting with
Trump. He said he has gotten a flurry of calls from other industries next in
line for a White House visit.
At the
end of most meetings, Trump leads CEOs into the Oval Office, showing off
paintings, sculptures and the furniture, as well as the rug and curtains he has
picked out. He also points out a bust of Martin Luther King Jr., which he
inherited from Obama. Then he takes a group photo behind the desk.
“He becomes tour guide and brings them over to the Oval Office,” the same
official said. “He’s very proud of the Oval Office.”
The White House official said Trump recognized the “awe” of the Oval Office.
CHAIR FOR GM, BIRTHDAY WISH FOR FORD
Chief executives of Detroit's top three automakers - General Motors Co, Ford
Motor Co <F.N> and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV <FCHA.MI> - were pleasantly
surprised when they went to the White House for a breakfast with Trump on Jan.
24.
Since
his election, Trump has frequently attacked the car companies for building in
Mexico and warned U.S. firms would no longer be able to move U.S. jobs abroad
"without consequences."
When Trump entered the Roosevelt Room, he greeted GM CEO Mary Barra with a
playful tap on the shoulder as he gently prodded her to add jobs in the United
States and later pulled out her chair before the meeting started, a review of
the video transcripts of the first part of the meeting shows.
He greeted Ford CEO Mark Fields with a "Happy Birthday. It's his birthday ladies
and gentlemen." Trump said it was a "great honor" to see Fiat Chrysler CEO
Sergio Marchionne.
Trump did not specifically ask them to build plants in the United States - as he
had tweeted he would before the meeting - but instead listened to their
complaints about regulations and indicated a willingness to help them, people
briefed on the meeting said.
Ford
declined to comment and referred to Fields' comments to dealers in January that
Trump had asked for a list of regulations that automakers wanted cut or kept.
GM CEO Mary Barra said in a speech last week that Trump “really listened” to the
automakers, while Marchionne told reporters at the Geneva auto show on Tuesday
that Trump was “quite willing to make our lives easier” in terms of compliance
and taxes in order to encourage U.S. job creation.
Trump has been complimentary of his high-profile guests - and at times playful.
After Denise Morrison, chief executive of Campbell Soup, introduced himself in
one of those meetings, Trump quickly responded: "Good soup."
At another, after Target Corp CEO Brian Cornell spoke, Trump responded by
pronouncing the name of the company as “Tar-Jay,” a common joke to make the
retailer sound more fancy.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson and David Shepardson in Washington, Additional
reporting by Emily Stephenson in Washington and Emily Flitter in New York,
Editing by Soyoung Kim and Ross Colvin)
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