The scene set up the possibility of “a new kind of American oligarchy,” my colleagues Michael Scherer and Ashley Parker wrote in The Atlantic that afternoon. Trump’s empowerment of Musk, the world’s richest man,
President Donald Trump said Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos were his "bitter enemies" during his first term in office, but those relationships have improved since then. The president's comment was made on Thursday afternoon and ran in The Spectator on Friday,
Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), who has emerged as one of his party’s loudest critics of the Trump administration, said the newly elected executive branch is focused on “stealing from all of
FCC chairman Brendan Carr wrote a letter to top tech CEOs, including Apple CEO Tim Cook and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, calling on them to stand up to European censorship.
President Donald Trump launched his second term with a series of executive actions that could have broad economic implications, and corporate leaders have taken note. At his inauguration, the key figures from the tech industry,
Right-wing pundits have long peddled a narrative that public institutions and corporations in America have sold out to an assortment of “liberal, leftist, and communist” principles. These entities, the pundits claim, seek to pressure Americans into adopting radical and dystopian reimaginations of gendered and racial relations.