, where he will get to comment as a new Commander-in-Chief is likely to dismantle much of what his predecessor wrought.“I’ve said good and bad things about Democrats and Republicans,” says Kudlow in an interview, noting that business-news viewers probably already know his philosophy. He launches “Kudlow,” a Fox Business hour that will run at 4 p.m. and re-air at 7 p.m., today. Former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin will be one of his first guests.
Stock-market aficionados have had a long relationship with Kudlow, who held several top Wall Street jobs and advised politicians ranging from President Ronald Regan to former New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman on the economy from behind the scenes. He was a fixture for nearly two decades onHe’s poised to add some new elements to his repertoire. His time in the Trump administration “kind of opened my eyes” to the plight of lower- and middle-class workers, he says.
Kudlow is one of the first Trump administration officials to find firm landing in the media world, which has yet to embrace other Trump representatives like Kayleigh McEnany or Kellyanne Conway with full-time roles Many who exited the administration left with baggage. During his tenure, Kudlow was accused of offering too-rosy predictions of U.S. economic growth and of minimizing the potential effects of the coronavirus pandemic before it took true root across the nation. But he says the economy is in fact poised to boom, particularly in the manufacturing and technology sectors, if government officials can open schools and restaurants and get more vaccine shots in arms.
Okay, just remember to do the exact opposite of whatever he says and you will be just fine.