Trump-Cook 'bromance' culminates with visit to Apple factory
Trump's visit to Apple's Texas manufacturing plant represents a truce in the White House war on Silicon Valley and an unlikely "bromance" with chief executive Tim Cook
President Donald Trump's visit to Apple's Texas manufacturing plant represents a truce in the White House war on Silicon Valley and an unlikely "bromance" with chief executive Tim Cook.
The visit will give the US leader a chance to hail American manufacturing and step back, at least temporarily, from his tirade against big technology firms.
Apple announced in September it would keep making its Mac Pro computer in the United States, after obtaining tariff exemptions for some components in the high-end computers.
The developments show an unusual Trump-Cook relationship in sharp contrast with the president's attacks on other tech giants.
"On the face of it, it's an unlikely relationship," said Roger Kay, analyst at Endpoint Technologies Associates who follows the sector.
Cook, who supported Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016, has been able to sidestep much of Trump's anger by being "very diplomatic," Kay said.
"He's not saying 'I love Trump,' but he's not saying 'I hate Trump,'" said Kay.
"He hasn't made any disparaging public comments. By not ruffling Trump's feathers he's gotten quite a lot out of it."
Cook and Trump remain far apart on a number of issues including trade and immigration, with Apple opposing the White House plan to end protection for so-called "dreamers" who came to the US as children.
While Apple has acknowledged it has paid some tariffs imposed by Trump on goods imported from China, the iPhone maker has so far avoided a major impact from the trade friction.
Sidestepping Trump tirades
Trump, who has called Google and social media firms "biased" and been especially critical of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos -- accusing him of using his personal investment in the Washington Post for politics -- has had mostly praise for the Apple CEO.
"Other companies hire very expensive consultants," Trump said in August. "But the only one who calls me is Tim Cook. He calls me whenever there's a problem."
Trump, who once referred to the CEO as "Tim Apple," appears to be forging a friendly relationship with Cook even when he offers criticism.
In one tweet, he seemed to fret over the design of the latest iPhones which no longer have a home button.
"To Tim: The Button on the IPhone was FAR better than the Swipe!" Trump wrote.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Cook has quietly cultivated his relationship with Trump through the president's daughter Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner, both of whom advise the president.
Trump appears to have softened some of his positions on tariffs after hearing Cook's argument that punishing Apple would help foreign rivals such as Samsung.
"Tim Cook has gone out of his way it seems to develop a relationship with President Trump because he was concerned I'm sure of the potential impact on the business" from Trump's policies, said Bob O'Donnell of Technalysis Research.
Because most of Apple products are manufactured in China, "there was a potentially large impact on profitability," O'Donnell said.
"Tim Cook is trying to be pragmatic and trying to address the issue by tackling it head on."
Apple, which benefited from legislation signed by Trump that reduced taxes on repatriated profits from 35 to 15 percent, has responded to White House efforts by pledging to invest $350 billion in the US economy by 2023 through its own manufacturing and from suppliers.
O'Donnell said that Cook's efforts to forge a relationship with Trump has some risks as well in Silicon Valley, where the president is unpopular.
"I think some people who are Apple fans and don't like Trump find it a little disconcerting," O'Donnell said.
Kay said however that Apple employees and customers understand the needs of the business, and that Cook's efforts might even ease some of the tensions between the White House and the tech industry.
"Maybe Tim can create a rosier halo around Silicon Valley," Kay said.
"If he puts a human face on Silicon Valley, it could give Trump a slightly different view."
-
Pam Bondi, dubbed Trump's Ghislaine Maxwell, gets fired
-
Macron slams Trump: ‘Neither elegant nor up to standard’ over mockery
-
Storm Dave: Everything you need to know to stay safe this Easter weekend
-
Where is Artemis II today? Here is everything to know about NASA’s journey to the moon
-
Brazil approves law giving separated couples joint custody of pets
-
European Space Agency to negotiate with NASA on future lunar missions
-
SpaceX AI satellites plan raises doubts after Microsoft setback
-
'Poisoned' Mount Everest climbers expose guides' million-dollar fraud scheme
-
NASA Artemis II historic rocket launch: Spacecraft successfully enters Earth orbit
-
NASA Artemis II lifts off, sending cubesats into deep space study
-
Vanessa Trump remains loyal to Tiger Woods after DUI arrest: Report
-
Pink moon 2026: when to see April’s full moon and why it won’t look pink in the sky