Democracy Dies in Darkness

As GOP rivals collapse, Wall Street warms to second Trump term

Business titans broke with Trump over the Capitol insurrection but are signaling a new desire to work with the Republican front-runner

January 24, 2024 at 12:52 p.m. EST
Former president Donald Trump leaves a news conference in Lower Manhattan after a court appearance on Jan. 11. Wall Street executives who condemned Trump in 2021 are now warming up to him again. (John Taggart for The Washington Post)
8 min

Wall Street executives who had pined for a GOP alternative to Donald Trump face a stark dilemma after Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary appeared to affirm that Trump is on his way to becoming his party’s presidential nominee for the third consecutive election.

By the end of Trump’s first term, many of the biggest names in corporate America and high finance were openly criticizing Trump over his denial that he lost the 2020 election and his subsequent role in fueling the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the Capitol. But with Trump likely to face President Biden again this year, some business titans have publicly softened their opposition in recent days, potentially signaling a desire to work with Trump if he lands back in the White House.