Facebook Pixel Loser takes all | Business Standard - newspaper - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

Loser takes all

Business Standard

|

November 30, 2024

This book was published in September, three months ahead of the US presidential polls, presumably to reveal to voters the dangers of returning Donald Trump to the White House.

- KANIKA DATTA

Loser takes all

Since the American people, with ample experience of Trump's toxic first term, chose to vote him back, the deluge of bad publicity from the liberal establishment, this book included, didn't work. That reality does not detract from the fact that Lucky Loser is a very good book. By scrutinising Trump's business and tax returns over decades, Russ Buettner and Susanne Craig offer forensic proof that the man who will be sworn in as the 47th president of the United States is little more than a duplicitous chancer.

Buettner and Craig are Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporters at the New York Times who have been reporting on Donald Trump's businesses and personal finances since 2016. Some of the stories of his failures in running casinos and golf courses and stunning $915,729,293 losses on his income tax returns in 1995 had made headlines at the height of his first presidential campaign. With this book, the authors comprehensively disprove "Donald Trump's lifelong claim that his father gave him nothing more than a 'small' $1 million loan."

On the contrary, as their investigations revealed, Trump was the quintessential Trust Fund kid, financing his high rolling lifestyle and early business ventures through money that his low-key billionaire father, Fred Trump, sequestered in a trust fund for his five children. In Buettner and Craig's telling, Donald Trump is, in fact, a terrible businessman, choosing investments on a whim and so chronically unable to soberly assess business potential that he almost never made money on any of his marque ventures. Each time he failed it was his father's fortune and political contacts that bailed him out - sometimes illegally.

MORE STORIES FROM Business Standard

Business Standard

Business Standard

Netflix cofounder Hastings exits as growth hunt intensifies

Reed Hastings, who transformed Netflix from a scrappy DVD subscription service into a globe-spanning Hollywood colossus, will step down in June from the board of the company he cofounded, the company said on Thursday.

time to read

1 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

₹ jumps as RBI restricts spot $ buying by OMCS

The rupee strengthened for a second consecutive session, settling under the 93-perdollar mark amid reports that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has asked oil companies to refrain from purchasing dollars in the spot market and instead utilise a special window.

time to read

2 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

Bill to implement women's quota fails Lok Sabha test

The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, which sought to implement reservation for women in legislatures by 2029, was defeated in the Lok Sabha on Friday, despite the government's outreach to the Opposition.

time to read

3 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

Business Standard

Higher wages fail to move the needle for workers

Dinesh Kumar's story reflects a wider reality playing out across industrial hubs such as Noida (Uttar Pradesh) and Manesar (Haryana).

time to read

3 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

Angel One takes ₹19 crore hit on MCX trading disruption

Domestic brokerage Angel One has taken a ₹19.2 crore hit following last year’s trading disruption at Multi Commodity Exchange of India (MCX), as it moved to compensate clients impacted by the outage.

time to read

1 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

Adani group to invest ₹ 1trn in 143-acre plan

The Adani group will invest around ₹1 trillion in the Motilal Nagar redevelopment project in Mumbai's Goregaon West, where it is expected to get a free-sale component of about 1.7 million square metres.

time to read

1 min

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

Assassination and statecraft

American objectives are unmet. They neither have the muscle nor motivation to resume the war. As for Iran, the regime hasn't just survived, it’s now led by more radical individuals

time to read

5 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

Odisha procured modified Thar SUVs for ₹17 cr from disaster response fund: CAG audit

A special audit by the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has found Odisha’s forest and environment department sidestepped guidelines of the Centre in expenditure from the State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF), and procured Mahindra

time to read

2 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

Business Standard

House panel flags gaps in offshore mining push

A parliamentary panel has recom- mended a dedicated offshore mineral exploration policy and funding framework, flagging gaps in India’s preparednesstotap seabed resources. The recommendations cameafterthe government's first attempt to auction offshore blocks failed to attract investor interest.

time to read

1 mins

April 18, 2026

Business Standard

An open letter from Pluto

Dear Nasa and International Astronomical Union (or IAU, if you please)

time to read

3 mins

April 18, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size