


She was given an opening-night speaking slot at the Republican National Convention. In the 2020 campaign, Trump has spotlighted no woman more brightly than Guilfoyle. The document, which resulted in a multimillion-dollar out-of-court settlement, raises serious questions about Guilfoyle’s fitness as a character witness for Trump, let alone as a top campaign official. In November, 2018, a young woman who had been one of Guilfoyle’s assistants at Fox News sent company executives a confidential, forty-two-page draft complaint that accused Guilfoyle of repeated sexual harassment, and demanded monetary relief. Guilfoyle, however, may not be an ideal emissary. As part of his campaign, Trump has been doing all he can to showcase female stars in the Republican Party, from nominating Amy Coney Barrett for the Supreme Court to naming Kimberly Guilfoyle, the former Fox News host and legal analyst, his campaign’s finance chair. Warren Buffett predicts U.S.As President Donald Trump heads into the 2020 elections, he faces a daunting gender gap: according to a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll, he trails Joe Biden by thirty percentage points among female voters.Charlie Munger sees more pain ahead with U.S.Prior to the meeting, dozens of uniform-clad pilots at Berkshire-owned NetJets demonstrated outside the arena, protesting low pay and long hours. Photo by REUTERS/Rachel Mummey Waiting on line He also said that while Berkshire owns nearly one-fourth of Occidental Petroleum Corp., it has no plans to take control of the company.Ĭharlie Munger, a longtime China bull who spearheaded Berkshire’s investment in electric car company BYD Co., called for lowered tensions and increased trade between that country and the United States.īuffett cited those tensions in saying he is more comfortable deploying capital in Japan than in Taiwan.Īn attendee at the Berkshire Hathaway Inc shareholders meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 5 poses with an exhibit.

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. It is a better world than we’ve ever had.”īuffett spoke hours after Berkshire posted a US$35.5-billion quarterly profit and said it bought back US$4.4 billion of its own stock, a sign it considered the shares undervalued. But if I still had a choice, I would want to be born in the United States. “We have to refine, in a certain way, our democracy as we go along. Photo by REUTERS/Rachel Mummeyīuffett also warned of a growing “tribalism” in Washington where partisanship causes people to talk past each other. “Fear is contagious,” he said, adding that “you can’t run an economy” when people worry if their money is safe in banks.Ī person takes a picture as investors and guests arrive for the Berkshire Hathaway Inc annual shareholders’ meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 6. The next issue of FP Investor will soon be in your inbox. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder.
