Talk:List of economic advisors to Donald Trump
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Table
editI would recommend removing the table of people who attended the technology-CEO meeting. It implies that these people are official advisors to Trump rather than people who met him once. Is is also not clear why the net worth/market cap of their companies is included when the same information is not present for Trump's formal advisors. Absolutelypuremilk (talk) 23:24, 26 December 2016 (UTC)
- Most of the formal advisors were (relatively speaking!) poorer, with the exception quasi-informal Thiel and formal-but-belated Wilbur Ross (both of whom are now on the cabinet or the transition team in formal roles). I would be fine with splitting the article into 'formal advisors' section, and then later have an informal advisors section, if you think that will help. However, even for the 'informal' advisors, my understanding is that the meetings will be repeated regularly going forwards, or at least, that was the implication I remember gathering from the sources. Trump also specifically said (from my own memory again so citation needed) that he was willing to take direct phone calls from the tech-CEO attendees, during the next four years. Or conceivably eight years. As for the reason for listing market cap and net worth, it is explanatory: Tesla Motors and Palantir do not really belong on the list until you consider that the attendees representing those companies were billionaires personally. I also worked up a third chart, not included since not backed by RS, about the various CEOs that were *not* on either of the lists -- there are only a few companies which failed to make the cut, that potentially should have, based on market cap and number of employees and similar measures that wikipedia tracks. One of them was Tillerson of ExxonMobil, but of course he is getting nominated for SecState. Another was Warren Buffett, who only backs non-repub candidates.[citation needed] If you think it is worth adding net worth and market cap for the formal advisors that were with Trump'16 during the campaign, that can be done, but we would need to find some sources. Most of them are not billionaires, and none of them are tech-CEOs; Trump only gained such high-powered advisors after becoming potus-elect. And for course, therefore, most of the post-election meetings discussed in the sources, have the market cap and net worth figures being discussed in multiple articles, and several sources *only* concentrated on that type of detail, because it is unusual for potus to have such direct relationships with megacorporations, in recent history (as opposed to e.g. late 1800s). 47.222.203.135 (talk) 00:24, 27 December 2016 (UTC)
Page name
editThis page includes mostly economic campaign advisors, not government advisors to Trump, and the title of the page should probably be changed to reflect that. Politico16 (talk) 18:18, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
External links modified
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ToDo if this article will contain only his 1st term advisors
editShould this article be narrowed in scope to just the 1st term, disambiguate outgoing links to Political appointments by Donald Trump. —CX Zoom[he/him] (let's talk • {C•X}) 22:21, 1 December 2024 (UTC)