
KAMALA HARRIS'S FIRST speech outlining her economic policies did not bode well for business. In Raleigh, N.C., a week before the convention where she officially became the Democrats' nominee for president, her language sounded bellicose: She boasted that as California's attorney general she "took on insurance companies and Big Pharma," that she "went after companies that illegally increased prices," and that as president she would "attack" the high cost of health care and "crackdown" on unscrupulous corporate landlords. In that speech and many to follow, "big banks," "Wall Street," "corporations," and "middlemen" were the liberal version of red meat-dirty words thrown out to elicit loud boos.
Yet while Harris's public rhetoric does little to win over businesspeople, she is attracting the support of many of them. The language in an endorsement letter signed by 90 prominent business figures shows clearly why: her predictability, compared with her erratic opponent.
The letter oozes with implied disdain of Donald Trump and asserts that electing Harris is the best way to support "reliability" and "stability." The signatories, which included tech founders and media moguls, as well as executives from the banking, investment, insurance, and pharmaceutical industries, offered a bottom-line rationale for Harris in the White House: "The business community can be confident that it will have a President who wants American industries to thrive."
Those tycoons can't be thrilled by Harris's robustious promotion of higher taxes for richly paid individuals like themselves. Her lack of private-sector employment in her career may worry them. But as one signatory - a high-level Wall Street executive - tells Fortune, "Even those whose tax bills may be increased [in a Harris administration] recognize the impact on the American economy is going to be materially negative in a Trump scenario."
Bu hikaye Fortune US dergisinin October - November 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Fortune US dergisinin October - November 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap

The Blackstone Edge
90 DAYS. DOZENS OF INTERVIEWS. BILLIONS ON THE LINE. HOW BLACKSTONE'S CEO-MAKER GETS THE JOB DONE.

When Elon Musk has a really tough job, he turns to Steve Davis. DOGE might do the same.
IT WAS THE FALL OF 2022 when employees at Elon Musk's Boring Company began to notice Steve Davis wasn't around.

ASK ANDY - SHOULD MY STARTUP RAISE MONEY FROM VCS? IF SO, WHICH ONES DO I CHOOSE?
A FRIEND—I’ll call him Allen—spent years bootstrapping his real estate enterprise software company. After a long struggle to get to $1 million in sales, his business recently surged to $10 million, and revenue is now growing 100% year on year.

ELLIOTT HILL - JUST DOING IT
Staffers and brand loyalists cheered when Nike's new CEO came out of retirement to lead the company he has had an “irrational love” for since he began there as an intern. Turning it around will take more than good vibes.

HOW TO PLAN YOUR NEXT $100,000 VACATION
ON AN EXCURSION to the ancient city of Petra, Jordan, clients helicoptered in after-hours so they could tour the ruins alone.

THE BATTLE OVER AG1
Influencers are fighting over it. Scientists scoff at it. But the $100-a-month powder once known as Athletic Greens is only getting more popular.

THE WORKPLACE - GEN ZERS WANT TO BE THEIR OWN BOSS.CAN THE CORPORATE WORLD WOO THEM BACK?
CHASE GALLAGHER WAS 12 years old when he started mowing his neighbors' lawns in Chester County, Pa., for $35 a pop in the summer of 2013. At first the Gen Zer had only two customers, but thanks to some aggressive leafleting, he had 10 clients by the following year.

How much can DOGE do?
Elon Musk and Donald Trump aim to cut as much as $2 trillion in federal spending. It'll be even harder than it sounds.

YOUNG PEOPLE ARE DRINKING LESS ALCOHOL. CAN CEO MICHEL DOUKERIS PERSUADE THEM TO KEEP DRINKING AB INBEV'S BEERS?
SOME TIME AGO, top CEOs at an invitation-only seminar at Harvard Business School were asked to imagine the four crises they would likely confront during their tenure at the top: a health emergency, a geopolitical conflict, an economic downturn, and a trade war.

America's drug middlemen are now a $557 billion industry. Can Trump and his allies 'knock out' PBMs?
IN LATE DECEMBER, President-elect Donald Trump put pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, on notice.