Trump's former chief strategist told ABC Sunday he believes the billionaires' inauguration attendance is an "official surrender" to the next administration.
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon has dubbed Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg a “criminal” and said he would be likely to betray the MAGA movement despite his recent efforts to woo the president-elect.
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
Former Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon said tech billionaires attendance at Trump's inauguration is a sign of their "official surrender" to Trump.
Steve Bannon, former adviser to Donald Trump and architect of the MAGA movement, has turned his ire against yet another supplicant snake from Silicon Valley: Mark Zuckerberg.
Bannon called Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Jeff Bezos ‘supplicants,’ not ‘oligarchs,’ seeking to curry favor with Trump ahead of his inauguration.
Steve Bannon, a former adviser to President-elect Trump, went after Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a Monday episode of his “Bannon’s War Room” show. “Zuckerberg can’t be trusted, at all,” Bannon said
He is a truly evil guy, a very bad guy,” Bannon told the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera. “I made it my personal thing to take this guy down.”
Steve Bannon has intensified the MAGA civil war by comparing the sudden support for Donald Trump from tech titans Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos to the Japanese surrender at the end of World War II.
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.
Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to do away with Meta’s third-party fact-checking service was presented as a sweeping cultural change across the company’s platforms—but apparently, its new policy will apply only in the United States.
Bannon described the high-profile tech leaders who've embraced Trump as "supplicants" during an interview on ABC's "This Week."