Steve Bannon, a former adviser to President-elect Trump, called Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg a criminal during an interview on ABC’s “This Week” with Jonathan Karl. During a discussion about Zuckerberg’s and other tech moguls’ relationships with Trump and the fact that they will be getting prime seats at the inauguration on Monday,
Donald Trump's former chief strategist Steve Bannon is going after other members of the president-elect's orbit as Trump returns to Washington to take his second oath of office. Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook and Instagram's parent company Meta ...
They're not there because they support Trump. They're there because the Trump movement and President Trump broke them’ Bannon said ahead of Trump’s inauguration
Bannon called Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Jeff Bezos ‘supplicants,’ not ‘oligarchs,’ seeking to curry favor with Trump ahead of his inauguration.
Former Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon said tech billionaires attendance at Trump's inauguration is a sign of their "official surrender" to Trump.
open image in gallery Steve Bannon speaking to Jonathan Karl on ABC News show This Week (ABC News) Bannon told ABC News’s Jonathan Karl that the decision of Musk, Meta CEO Zuckerberg and Amazon ...
Bannon and another Trump ally, now-incoming deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller, worked on Trump's first inaugural address. It's been dubbed the 'American Carnage' speech, and painted a populist, dark picture of the country he was then inheriting.
Bannon described the high-profile tech leaders who've embraced Trump as "supplicants" during an interview on ABC's "This Week."
Donald Trump's former chief strategist Steve Bannon is going after other members ... Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook and Instagram's parent company Meta, has previously come under fire from ...
Steve Bannon says this inauguration will feel very ... latter’s support for the H-1B visa and high-skilled immigration. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos and Musk will be at Trump’s ...
Trump thinks he won by talking about the economy — and now he gets to wreck it and enrich his billionaire pals
Now, as Trump returns to the White House thanks, partially, to money from Silicon Valley, it stands to reason that the big tech platforms currently suffering from European regulatory scrutiny would want it to end. As tech CEOs line up to schmooze with the president, this is surely what companies like Apple, Meta, and Amazon were hoping for.