dimanche 19 juin 2016

KKK Candidate bad for business

It looks like more and more companies are choosing not to attend the GOP convention seemingly in a bid to avoid being associated with the unapologetically racist and sexist presidential GOP candidate.

Ford and JPMorgan join growing list of companies shunning Donald Trump’s coronation in Cleveland

Quote:

Big corporations usually shy away from partisan politics, but they often support conventions to promote their brands and schmooze with state and federal officials. Trump’s nomination threatens both of those priorities, according to Republican operatives who advise companies on political activities.

“It’s a question of balancing the desire to be present at this convention versus brand association with one figure who is so polarizing,” said Bruce Haynes, a Republican media consultant in Alexandria, Virginia. “That's why the decision is so difficult, when otherwise it's so easy.”
Quite simply, it is bad business to be associated with a candidate who has long known to have had more staunch support from major white supremacist groups than any other major candidate in recent history. The list of the companies that have decided to avoid the Republican convention all together solely because of Trump continues to grow daily. The risk of being associated with a candidate who utilizes racist arguments in order to make up for a lack of substantive policy far outweighs the benefit of reaching the large numbers of reasonable delegates who will attend the convention.



The problems for US business with a Trump presidency is not just focused around being tied to a racist platform. His serious lack of judgement on major issues, and out of control erratic behavior presents a major risk for companies in the US. Some US companies have already started to look at long list of risks of a Trump presidency, and have even considered moving headquarters out of the US to mitigate that risk.

How Businesses Should Prepare For President Trump
Quote:

Anyone doing business overseas also needs to start pondering worst-case scenarios. “It’s not unlikely that a President Trump will confront other countries – like Russia and China – so aggressively on trade or other issues that those powers will retaliate against U.S. companies doing business there,” says Alex Manning, Senior Government Relations Director at Arent Fox. Manning can envision excessive “hurdles” that, if not overtly confiscatory, may make it impossible to successfully compete.

“Who knows how Trump might react to an espionage or cyber incident,” adds Manning. As risk management options in such situations, Manning does not rule out simply moving headquarters to a different country or at least “calling out” the Trump Administration so vigorously as to persuade Moscow or Beijing that the company is a staunch ally and punitive measures are therefore ill-advised.
These are major problems for companies, workers, and all tax payers in the US. Trump's erratic and manic behavior present a real danger to anyone who wants to see solid and stable economic growth in the country.


via International Skeptics Forum http://ift.tt/1W7z0Nh

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire