Donald Trump to attend private meeting with Business Roundtable weeks after conviction
Former President Donald Trump will attend a private meeting with one of the most powerful business lobbying groups in Washington as he tries to craft an alliance with major corporate leaders.Ā
Joshua Bolten, the CEO of the Business Roundtable, confirmed in an email to members on Wednesday that Trump will be at the groupās plenary meeting in Washington on June 13. Though President Joe Biden was invited, he cannot attend due to overseas travel for a G7 meeting. The business group instead asked White House chief of staff Jeff Zients to come, according to Boltenās email. Zients accepted the invitation last week and plans to address the group on June 13, according to a person familiar with his plans.Ā
The meeting is off the record and closed to the press, Bolten wrote in his message, which said that Trumpās team confirmed to the group that the former president will be at the gathering. A spokesperson for the Trump campaign declined to comment. The Business Roundtable did not return requests for comment.Ā
The invite to members arrived almost a week after Trump was convicted in New York of falsifying business records to hide a hush money payment to a porn actress. Trump has continued to deny those charges.Ā
The meeting could draw all of the Business Roundtableās members, which features over 200 CEOs. It could prove to be a pivotal moment for Trump, who has been trying to reel in business leaders to support and donate to his campaign for president, while touting the idea of tax cuts and implementing sweeping tariffs if he defeats Biden in November.Ā
Among the groupās members is Blackstone CEO Steve Schwarzman, who recently endorsed Trump after saying in 2022 he wanted to back an alternative to the former president. Other members include JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, Carlyle Group CEO Harvey Schwartz, AT&T CEO John Stankey and Chevron CEO Mike Wirth.Ā
The Business Roundtable did not always support Trumpās policies during his presidency.Ā
While it cheered on Trumpās tax cuts, the group took issue with the then-presidentās policy tariffs on Chinese products.Ā
Several of its members resigned in 2017 from the White Houseās business advisory councils following the white nationalist attack in Charlottesville, Virginia.Ā
Chuck Robbins, chair and CEO of Cisco and current chair of the Business Roundtable, said at the time that āit is incomprehensible that weāre having this conversation in 2017ā and that his company denounced āracism, discrimination, neo-Nazism, white supremacy.ā
After the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, the Business Roundtable condemned the attack and called on Trump to āput an end to the chaos and to facilitate the peaceful transition of power.ā
Still, Trump has regularly tried to court wealthy business leaders despite clear differences with some of them.
Susie Wiles, Trumpās senior campaign adviser, spoke in front of a group of powerful Republican megadonors in Florida in January about why she believes they should support Trump. The group is led by veteran investor Paul Singer.Ā
Even post-conviction, Republican-leaning business leaders have shrugged off Trumpās conviction and, in some cases, extended more support. The Trump operation announced that it raised over $50 million in the 24 hours following the guilty verdict last week.