Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Trump’s new communications director used to call him an anti-American hack politician

But Trump loves hedge funds now, so it’s okay.

Back in August 2015, Anthony Scaramucci, who has just been appointed White House communications director, was on Fox Business to discuss Donald Trump’s then-recent bashing of the hedge fund industry as just people who “move around paper,” in contrast to Trump’s real brick-and-mortar construction business.

Scaramucci was scathing in his response, labeling Trump “a hack politician” with “anti-American” rhetoric. He said Trump was on track to be “president of the Queens County Bullies’ Association” and that while other GOP “politicians don’t want to go after Trump because they’re afraid he’s going to light them up on Fox News,” he wasn’t afraid.

“You’re an inherited money dude from Queens County,” Scaramucci said. “Bring it.”

At the end of the clip, Scaramucci — who had a varied background in finance before making his real money running what’s known as a “fund of hedge funds,” essentially a super-high-fee investment vehicle that lets people pay Scaramucci fees for the right to invest in a diverse portfolio of high-fee hedge funds — gets to the real point.

“Bashing the hedge fund community is right out of Elizabeth Warren’s playbook,” Scaramucci remarks, before speculating that Trump might be “a plant” from the Democratic Party.

In office, Trump has governed as an extremely loyal friend of high finance. His Treasury secretary is a hedge fund guy, and his National Economic Council director used to work at Goldman Sachs. He’s taking executive action to make it easier for investment advisers to get away with giving clients bad advice, and he’s thrown his administration’s weight behind an effort to repeal the post-crisis financial regulations. His pick for the top regulatory job on the Fed, Randy Quarles, has a finance background and headed up domestic financial regulation at the Treasury Department in the mid-aughts.

Trump is a Republican, and Republicans like business-friendly regulation. And Trump is specifically a Republican who’s spent decades living in Manhattan, where a very disproportionate share of the rich businesspeople you meet work in finance. And his administration shows it.

But Scaramucci’s old take on Trump is a reminder that candidate Trump was a different — and in many ways more moderate — brand of Republican who expressed considerable skepticism about the mainstream GOP’s approach to economic policy. Scaramucci has changed his tune on Trump, but more fundamentally, it’s Trump who’s changed his approach.

See More:

More in Politics

The Logoff
Trump’s brazen plan for a $1.7 billion slush fundTrump’s brazen plan for a $1.7 billion slush fund
The Logoff

Trump will reportedly drop his IRS lawsuit — for a price.

By Cameron Peters
Politics
The rise of the progressive billionaire candidateThe rise of the progressive billionaire candidate
Politics

Why some on the left are feeling warmly toward Tom Steyer and other very wealthy contenders.

By Andrew Prokop
Politics
Mifepristone survives another Supreme Court scare — for nowMifepristone survives another Supreme Court scare — for now
Politics

Only Thomas and Alito publicly dissented.

By Ian Millhiser
Podcasts
Why the anti-abortion movement is disappointed in TrumpWhy the anti-abortion movement is disappointed in Trump
Podcast
Podcasts

Trump helped overturn Roe. Anti-abortion advocates still aren’t happy.

By Peter Balonon-Rosen and Sean Rameswaram
Politics
A year of Trump is backfiring on the religious rightA year of Trump is backfiring on the religious right
Politics

Americans don’t really want “Christian nationalism.”

By Christian Paz
Politics
The real reason Americans hate the economy so muchThe real reason Americans hate the economy so much
Politics

Did decades of low inflation make the public far more unforgiving when it finally did surge?

By Andrew Prokop