ceos

'Mob boss' Trump’s favorite CEO donors targeted for investigation after midterms

MS NOW co-anchor Jacqueline Alemany says House Democrats are so convinced they will stampede the chamber in November that they are already planning to investigate U.S. companies that paid President Donald Trump millions for political favors.

Trump may thump his chest over Democrat-led House investigations, but tech giants, oil companies, defense contractors and Fortune 500 CEOs still fear congressional subpoenas and congressional scrutiny.

“Now, as House Democrats plot a return to the majority, they are pledging to probe the deals, mergers, settlements and regulatory favors that flowed to corporations doing business with the Trump administration,” reports Alemany.

Democrats are currently in the minority and limited to issuing “strongly worded letters and … toothless investigative authority,” but Alemany said they are already “laying the groundwork for a sweeping expansion of oversight targeting the companies and CEOs who have done business with the Trump family, or sought favorable regulatory treatment, merger approval, or policy changes from the administration — from Paramount to Palantir.”

“Trump’s running the presidency like a mob boss and everyone who has agreed to bribe him is a target for an investigation,” said a senior congressional staffer, speaking anonymously to MS NOW. “And although there’s a spectrum of wrongdoing with Elon Musk at one end and not much more than small businesses trying to get by on the other, there are very wealthy CEOs who know better. And we’re taking names.”

Critics may consider this retaliation against Trump’s corporate enablers but Democrats say this is a strategy that could “reshape corporate America’s relationship with Trump,” by making CEOs “think twice before opening their wallets or bending to presidential pressure.”

Biden administration national security adviser Jake Sullivan met with senior Democratic officials in December and encouraged them to hold the private sector more accountable as Trump embraced a more blatantly “transactional and retributive [form of] governance,” according to three sources in the meeting.

The idea caught on as a result of backlash to members of the national security community who have been fired or blacklisted by companies fearful of retribution from Trump. But the conversation quickly expanded to how completely companies have folded under pressure from the administration, said Alemany.

Democrats on the House Oversight Committee are already sending inquiries to chief executives of at least four oil companies, including Chevron, ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips and Continental Resources, demanding information to determine “who stands to privately or personally benefit from President Trump’s actions and whether corrupt motives were a driving force in U.S. foreign policy decision.”

CEOs have agreed-upon 'playbook' to stiff-arm Trump: report

As the second year of President Donald Trump's second term is about to begin, corporate CEOs are gradually coalescing around a strategy to both keep the administration at bay while also staying off of the president's revenge list.

In a Friday article for the Financial Times, several corporate executives spoke on how they plan to interact with the Trump administration in 2026. One unnamed "chief executive of a Wall Street bank" told the Financial Times that their company expects a rocky year, and hinted that this fall's elections may provide some relief.

"This year is going to be a very turbulent one until the [November] midterms," the person said. "We are going to have the most activist year of his presidency and we are all ready for it."

"MAGA has gone Maoist. It is state capitalism," Yale University professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld said. "It is not remotely conservative."

The corporate world is particularly uneasy about the Trump administration's recent capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, as well as his increasingly threatening rhetoric about a potential invasion of Greenland. One source described as a "lobbyist with decades of experience advising chief executives dealing with U.S. administrations" anonymously confided to the Financial Times that "standing up to Trump is usually a losing strategy." However, CEOs have slowly discovered a way to placate the administration while still going along with their previous plans.

"Privately, several executives concede they have little appetite for kowtowing to Trump," the Financial Times reported. "But advisers say a pragmatic playbook has emerged: show up, make a promise grand enough to flatter the president, and then do as little as possible until his attention shifts elsewhere."

This strategy may have been deployed as recently as last week, when a group of oil executives met with Trump at the White House to discuss the administration's plans for extracting Venezuela's oil. One unnamed business lobbyist told Politico that many CEOs have an acronym to describe the strategy dubbed "EMPANADA," which stands for "Everyone Makes Promises And Never Actually Does Anything."

Click here to read the Financial Times' report in its entirety (subscription required).

Tech CEO abruptly shuts down Trump over remark about his 'political career'

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg (whose company owns Facebook and Instagram) got into an uncomfortable exchange with President Donald Trump at the White House during a Thursday evening event at the Rose Garden.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Zuckerberg — who was seated next to the president — was asked a question about free speech laws in the United Kingdom in response to complaints about social media censorship. The reporter initially sought Trump's response, but also posed the question to Zuckerberg, who appeared to be caught off-guard.

"Sorry, I wasn't paying attention," Zuckerberg said.

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"The British government seems to be cracking down on social media posts, people being arrested for tweets, social posts. Just wondering how concerning that is for you, Mr. President, and Mr. Zuckerberg," the reporter said.

"This is the beginning of your political career," Trump said to the Meta CEO.

"No it's not," Zuckerberg quickly responded, before refusing to answer the reporter's question.

The Journal further reported that the meeting was rife with flattery from CEOs, including from OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who praised Trump as a "pro-business, pro-innovation president" and that he looked forward to "a long period of leading the world." Apple CEO Tim Cook also heaped compliments on the president, telling Trump that he appreciated his "leadership and focus on innovation" while reminding him of a commitment to invest $600 billion in American manufacturing. Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk — who garnered controversy earlier this year for his Department of Government Efficiency — was noticeably absent from the gathering, despite his companies having multibillion-dollar federal contracts.

READ MORE: 'Never been this bad': Young MAGA influencers say their income is 'tanking' due to Trump

Click here to read the Journal's report in its entirety (subscription required).

'Frightening': CEOs 'really uncomfortable' with Trump's threats against business leaders

The business world is now starting to speak out against President Donald Trump's hostile attitude toward CEOs who don't do what he likes.

That's according to a Thursday article in the Wall Street Journal, which reported that Trump's latest threat against Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan prompted a strong reaction from several corporate executives. In a Truth Social post this week, Trump demanded Tan "resign immediately" from the company or that Intel's board fire Tan due to his investments in Chinese semiconductor firms, saying there was "no other solution to this problem." Bill George, who is the former CEO of medical device company Medtronic, told the Journal: "It’s wrong for the president of the United States to be telling a major corporation’s board to fire their chief executive." He added that unless Tan broke the law, he had no reason to resign from the company.

“This is certainly not an approach the United States has seen in modern American politics,” Hofstra University's Meena Bose told the paper. “It’s government bending economic interests.”

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Following Trump's threat against Tan, semiconductor analyst Ray Wang warned that executives with ties to China should expect to receive similar threats from the president, calling it "the new normal." And Yale School of Management professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld told the outlet that Trump's rhetoric has struck a nerve with the business community.

"It’s just a frightening process to have the military commander of the U.S. pick and choose who’s to lead private companies," Sonnenfeld told the Journal.

According to the paper, the new threats against Intel's CEO have caught other business leaders off guard, who were reportedly focused on "public flattery and splashy U.S. investment announcements" as a means of staying in the administration's good graces. Apple CEO Tim Cook, for example, presented Trump with a gold-plated bauble at the White House this week, with Trump promising to exempt Apple from his latest tariffs. In response to the threat against Tan, Laffer Tengler Investments CEO Nancy Tengler told the Journal that she was "really uncomfortable with this kind of activity."

"This is, I think, not the purview of the president," she said.

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Click here to read the Wall Street Journal's report in its entirety (subscription required).

'Great cover for increased pricing': CEOs say Trump policies help them gouge customers

American corporate executives are openly acknowledging that they’re exploiting President Donald Trump’s controversial tariffs as “great cover” to justify their price hikes.

The New Republic highlighted a Groundwork Collaborative report published Tuesday which revealed that, in their own words, top executives are exploiting Trump’s erratic tariff strategies to jack up the price tags on consumer goods.

After reviewing earnings call transcripts from major corporations during the first half of 2025, Groundwork found that executives admitted they planned to raise prices even when they were not directly impacted by the administration’s economic measures.

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For instance, Holley’s CEO Matthew Stevenson reportedly said that the market has seen “price increases well in excess of what we put out into the market,” citing examples where competitors raised prices by “as high as 30 percent or more on some categories.”

Generac’s CEO Aaron Jagdfeld remarked, per the report, that “even if we have metals that weren’t impacted directly by tariffs, the indirect effect of tariffs is that it gives steel producers and the mills and other fabricators ... great cover for increased pricing in some cases.”

POOLCORP executives told investors they “expect that currently announced tariffs will positively impact net sales by approximately 1 [percent] based on vendor price increases to‑date.”

Rocky Brands’ CFO Thomas Robertson affirmed that “regardless” of any easing of Chinese tariffs, the company would still push ahead with a price increase.

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“We certainly welcome a reduction in the Chinese tariffs, but we’ll be announcing a price increase here regardless of any changes of the Chinese tariffs over the next week or two to go into effect in June," he said.


'Nobody wants to be on his radar': CEOs 'afraid of Trump' watching their words in public

Some CEOs of major Fortune 500 companies are now reportedly going out of their way to avoid saying anything publicly that could be construed as political, lest they end up in President Donald Trump's crosshairs.

That's according to a Wednesday article in the New York Times, which reported that corporate executives have been on increasingly high alert when speaking to shareholders about Trump's tariffs. While the previous 145% tariff on China has since been temporarily lowered to 30%, CEOs are still apparently anxious to say out loud that they plan on raising prices to account for the loss in profits.

"Companies have got to reconcile with the fact that politics has penetrated nearly every element of their business and to bake those considerations in to prepare your CEOs," corporate consultant Brett Bruen told the Times.

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For retailers who depend on Chinese imports for a significant portion of their inventory, like Walmart, the added costs from tariffs have become an especially sensitive topic. Walmart CEO Doug McDillon recently told investors on an earnings call that while he was grateful for a lower import tax of 30%, his company would still likely have to raise prices on its goods to make up for the higher trade duties. But Trump blasted McDillon in a post to his Truth Social account, ominously warning that he would be "watching" Walmart closely to make sure it would "EAT THE TARIFFS" instead of pass the cost to consumers.

"Walmart should STOP trying to blame Tariffs as the reason for raising prices throughout the chain," Trump wrote. "Walmart made BILLIONS OF DOLLARS last year, far more than expected. Between Walmart and China they should, as is said, 'EAT THE TARIFFS,' and not charge valued customers ANYTHING. I’ll be watching, and so will your customers!!!"

David Swartz, who is a senior equity analyst at the Chicago-based firm Morningstar, told the Times that he expects CEOs to be especially cagey with investors on future earnings calls to avoid getting on the president's bad side.

“Are they afraid of Trump? The answer is yes,” Swartz said. “Nobody wants to be on his radar, and the relatively minor things that Walmart and Mattel said — which are obvious — he gets mad at them essentially for saying the truth about something that he caused.”

READ MORE: 'Get out of here': Trump mocked as he 'runs his mouth' instead of running the country

Click here to read the Times' report in its entirety.

'Basic betrayal': CEOs terrified of Trump retaliation won’t speak out against policies

Republican strategist Stuart Stevens, who is a senior advisor for the Lincoln Project, is arguing that monied interests and economic giants are complicit in ruining the nation as they blindly follow a president determined to sink markets in both the United States and around the world.

“Why does [Blackstone Group CEO] Stephen A. Schwarzman support this guy? Why does [JP Morgan Chase CEO] Jamie Dimon support him? What has this done to their clients? What has it done for the wealth and the money they are handling for other individuals, which they are entrusted with? I find it absolutely inexplicable," Stevens said.

President Donald Trump's hand on economics was obvious today as the Dow Jones plunged by more than 1,600 points by early Thursday afternoon — a victim of Trump's so-called "Liberation Day" tariffs. Trump unleashing global "chaos," and pushed the “fear index” to its limits. The next day, he was off to his Trump National Doral Golf Club, ahead of an upcoming golf tournament.

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Executives were quick to bend the knee to Trump by last December with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg angling for an “active role” in shaping policy in the incoming administration, and Amazon founder and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos slanting and scrubbing the Post's opinion section write-ups in favor of “free markets and personal liberties.” Bezos’ editorial shadow drove Pulitzer Prize-winning opinion columnist Eugene Robinson and other employees to quit the paper in disgust.

Some CEOs were dancing on eggshells earlier this year trying to advise the president against tariffs while avoiding becoming a target of Trump’s retaliatory nature. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick castigated Bezos and Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, along with Nasdaq CEO Adena T. Friedman and Target CEO Brian Cornell in a February meeting for daring to question the wisdom of “Liberation Day.” Lutnick allegedly advised CEOS to think more “about how they can support the country" while Trump forges ahead.

But Stevens told MSNBC anchors on Thursday that CEOs enabling Trump’s careless behavior would not be allowed by any responsible board of any company “to put Donald Trump into a position of power.”

“They wouldn’t be allowed to, and yet they say ‘we’re determined to trust this guy and give him the keys to the economy, give him the keys to the world order. We’re going to pull out of NATO. We’re going to support Russia,’” said Stevens. “People are going to study this for years and years and years, and I don’t think they’re going to come up with a good answer at the basic betrayal of these people because they were either afraid, opportunistic or foolish.”

READ MORE: (Opinion) Why so-called men like Donald Trump are in deep trouble right now

Watch Stevens' comments below, or by clicking this link.


'Universal revulsion': CEOs of top American companies are 'privately' disgusted with Trump

Several top corporate CEOs recently confided that despite their public shows of fealty to President Donald Trump, they are less than flattering of him behind closed doors.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Trump was the main topic of conversation a gathering of corporate executives at the Yale CEO Caucus earlier this week. The economy has been on a roller coaster ride since Trump announced — and then almost immediately withdrew — punishing new tariffs on all goods imported from Canada and Mexico. 25% tariffs on Canadian imported steel and aluminum products went into effect Wednesday, however.

When Trump suggested doubling his steel and aluminum tariffs, the roomful of CEOs — which included JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, Pfizer CEO Albert Boula and Dell CEO Michael Dell — the Journal reported that the room "responded with a mix of groans and shocked laughter."

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"There was universal revulsion against the Trump economic policies," Yale School of Management professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, who organized the event, told the paper. "They’re also especially horrified about Canada."

Bill George, who is the former CEO of Medtronic, remarked that the corporate world has since learned to keep its criticisms of the 47th president of the United States under wraps out of fear of retribution. He said he was "struck by how fearful people are and how unwilling they are to speak out," adding that executives "don’t want to get on the wrong side of the president and his constituents."

He went on to lament the new uncertain economic climate that has taken hold in Trump's second term, which has lately seen financial markets dip precipitously this week as investors fear a trade war. He said companies are worried that outbursts from Trump could end up hurting their bottom line,, leading some to consider moves to curry favor with the regime in order to be spared from his wrath.

“The mood has totally changed,” George said. “What you’re hearing publicly is not what you’re going to hear privately.”

READ MORE: 'Not above the law': Fist-pounding Democrat explodes asking 'where's Elon Musk?'

Click here to read the Journal's full article (subscription required).

'Money is just pouring in': Trump reportedly berating CEOs to fork over millions in cash

Even though the Constitution prevents him from running for a third term, President-elect Donald Trump is currently sitting on hundreds of millions of dollars in cash – and the money is continuing to roll in.

Axios reported Wednesday that the president-elect is meticulously keeping track of who has donated to his inaugural fund and who hasn't, and that those who haven't yet donated are reportedly on a "grievance list." Trump has even been tracking how well companies have fared according to their balance sheets and stock prices, and is apparently using that information to shake down CEOs.

"You guys made this amount of money last year and you're gonna make so much more now because of me," Trump said according to an unnamed confidant.

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"But when I needed you, where the f— were you? You weren't with me and maybe you were with her," he reportedly added, referring to Vice President Kamala Harris.

This account was corroborated by another company's consultant, who told Axios that he saw Trump with a "client and soon-to-be-donor" and that the president-elect was "raking them over the coals" for not giving him money, saying: "Where were you the last four years?"

One of Axios' sources emphasized that this was not a pay-for-play scheme, insisting that while these CEOs were giving money to support Trump's agenda, the president-elect was not taking their money to support their agenda. This tracks with previous reporting by the New York Times, which found that despite companies like Meta, Amazon and Google giving $1 million apiece to Trump's inauguration, many top donors won't actually be getting anything for their money.

"On account of the shortage of seating at V.I.P. events, some donors have taken the unusual step of offering donations as high as $1 million without receiving anything in return," the Times reported last week.

READ MORE: 'Unusual step': Top Trump donors could be shut out of inauguration events

"A lot of these guys are going down [to Mar-a-Lago] taking victory laps because he's taking their money and they're in for a rude awakening," an unnamed corporate consultant told Axios. "Sure, he'll throw an inaugural party with their money but he owes them nothing."

"The money is just pouring in at Mar-a-Lago. Trump doesn't have to lift a finger," a Trump advisor anonymously told the outlet. "Everyone's coming to him."

"He'll take your money and then tell you, 'I don't give a f— what you want.' He did that during the campaign," they added. "He's going to do what he wants, what the base wants."

READ MORE: From Wall Street to Big Pharma: Here are the corporate giants bankrolling Trump's inauguration

Click here to read Axios' report in its entirety.

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