The Daily Signal - Victor Davis Hanson: From Enemies to Allies? Trump’s Quid Pro Quo With Silicon Valley
Episode Date: September 9, 2025President Donald Trump held a tech summit last week where a number of notable tech CEOs and gurus—who previously were vehement opponents of Trump—met at the White House. This included former Micro...soft CEO Bill Gates, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, members of Google, and more. It’s a quid pro quo: If major tech companies stop offshoring and start investing billions of dollars in the U.S. and create jobs, then Trump will approve their investments, productions, and use of greater energy sources. Victor Davis Hanson breaks it all down and explains how this move is similar to what former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt did when World War II broke out on today’s episode of “Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words.” “These CEOs don't like Trump. They're opposed to him ideologically, but they have one thing in common: They're patriotic.” “Maybe, just maybe, Trump can do for the United States in these emerging, absolutely essential fields of artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency, robotics, genetic engineering what FDR did in the War Production Board.” 👉Don’t miss out on Victor’s latest videos by subscribing to The Daily Signal today. You’ll be notified every time a new piece of content drops: https://www.youtube.com/dailysignal?sub_confirmation=1 👉If you can’t get enough of Victor Davis Hanson from The Daily Signal, subscribe to his official YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@victordavishanson7273 👉He’s also the host of “The Victor Davis Hanson Show,” available wherever you prefer to watch or listen. Links to the show and exclusive content are available on his website: https://victorhanson.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Donald Trump this past week has had a number of big tech CEOs and corporate grandees in general
a meet at the White House. He had them all around the table and they were the richest and most
innovative people in America. So it's kind of a quid pro quo when he brings in people that are
hostile to him, but he doesn't care as long as they're patriotic, they're pro-American, they're
going to use their brilliance and capital and expertise to advance the United States security
and prosperity. This is very reminiscent of what FDR did in 1939, 40, 41. If you do the following,
if you do not outsource, if you do not offshore, if you try to invest billions of dollars in the
United States, and you create jobs and you produce these products here, I'll try to get rid of the
red tape to the extent that I can.
Hello, this is Victor Davis Hanson for the Daily Signal.
Donald Trump this past week has had a number of big tech CEOs and corporate grandees in general a meet at the White House.
He had them all around the table, and they were the richest and most innovative people in America.
He had Bill Gates, the former Microsoft CEO.
There was Tim Cook, the current director of Apple, CEO of Apple, Mark Zuckerberg of Meta and Facebook.
He was there. Sam Altman, the artificial intelligence guru, supposedly Elon Musk was asked but couldn't make it. I don't know why he couldn't make it.
In addition, they had the Google people there. They had David Sachs, the Trump czar of cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence.
What was behind all of this? And I think what was behind all of us, Trump was sending a message to America and to these CEOs.
Remember, all these CEOs are liberal, with very few exceptions.
Mark Zuckerberg gave $419 million to stop Trump in the 2020 election.
So they're no friends necessarily of Donald Trump, and yet here they are around the table.
Why?
What's going on?
And I think he's saying that the Europeans are going after all of you to impose new
multibillion-dollar taxes on people who use your products in Europe in the EU.
sphere. The Chinese are even are approaching not just parity, but superiority to us in things like
accessible artificial intelligence, in robotics, and these have national security implications.
So what he was saying to all of you, here's the quid and here's the pro quo.
So if you do the following, if you do not outsource, if you do not offshore, if you try to invest billions of dollars in the United States and you create jobs and you produce these products here, I will do the following.
I will try to green light your investments, productions, use of greater energy sources.
I'll try to get rid of the red tape to the extent that I can.
I will tell the Europeans that if you try to unilaterally tax or overregulate or censor my companies,
I don't mean Trump's his own, but the companies he's representing as the President of the United States,
then we're going to do the same to you.
He's telling the Chinese we're going to compete with you,
and there's going to be certain things that you cannot import from these companies.
And so it's kind of a quid pro quo when he brings in people that are hostile to him,
but he doesn't care as long as they're patriotic, they're pro-American, they're going to use their
brilliance and capital and expertise to advance the United States security and prosperity.
This is very reminiscent of what FDR did in 1939, 40, 41.
When World War II broke out, we did not enter.
Remember that for over a year and a half.
Our army was smaller than Portugal's, 19th than the world.
We had about 300,000 people in the military, Japan, Germany, and Italy or eventual enemies.
They had almost 6 million.
Roosevelt's New Deal had not worked very well.
It was 1938.
We had a big recession, 18% unemployment.
So he said, we're going to build weapons.
He had Representative Vincent passed naval procurement acts, and then he brought
in people like Mark Zuckerberg, like Tim Cook, like Bill Gates, William Newtonson, the head of
General Motors at the time. Henry Ford, head of Ford Motor, Henry Kaiser, Kaiser Steel.
He brought in a number of people, and he called it the War Production Board, the Office of
Production Management, the National Advisory Commission, and he said to these CEOs, I'm not going to do
the New Deal with you. I'm not going to try to manage the economy. If you will follow my directive,
this is the quotas projected levels of expenditure and production. We need hundreds of thousands of
planes. We need tanks. We don't have any. Go to it, make money, but arm us quickly. And the rest
was history. Henry Kaiser was producing a 10,000-ton Liberty ship every three or four days in this West Coast
shipyards he created. Henry Ford was producing a B-24 one an hour at the huge Willow Run
aircraft production facility in Michigan. William Newtonson was overseeing the transition of
every major company in the United States into a war production company. And the result,
when the war was over, we had created 300,000 airplanes. We had more airplanes in every
or Air Force in the world combined.
We had created over 10,000 ships.
The U.S. Navy alone was larger than all the navies in the world.
The gross domestic product of the United States was larger than Russia, German, Italy,
Japan, or the British Empire, or Italy.
All the belligerents together could not produce what these men did in three or four years.
I could go on, but it was a story of going from basically being on-armed to be.
being the most armed and deadly military in the history of civilization.
So what Donald Trump is trying to do is what FDR tried to do.
Bring people who were ideologically opposed, and all these CEOs were conservative.
They did not like Trump.
They did not like, excuse me, FDR, they did not like the New Deal, and yet they worked
with him.
These CEOs don't like Trump.
They're opposed to him ideologically, but they have one thing in common.
They're patriotic.
And maybe, just maybe, Trump can do for the United States.
United States in these emerging absolutely essential fields of artificial intelligence,
cryptocurrency, robotics, genetic engineering. Maybe he can do what FDR did in the War
Production Board and famous names like Kaiser Ford and Henry Newton. Thank you very much. This is
Victor Davis Hansen for the Daily Signal. Thank you for tuning in to the Daily Signal.
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You can also check out my own website at victorhansson.com and subscribe for exclusive features in addition.
