Bill
Gates suggested Tuesday that there was a bit in common between how
President-elect Donald Trump and President John F. Kennedy communicated with
the American people.
The
billionaire philanthropist, who recently had a phone conversation with Trump to
discuss clean energy and climate change, told CNBC that "there can be a
very upbeat message" about a Trump administration.
"You
know, a lot of his message has been about things where he sees things not as
good as he'd like," he said.
The
Microsoft cofounder and Forbes-designated richest person in the world
continued: "But in the same way that President Kennedy talked about the
space mission and got the country behind that — I think that whether it's
education or stopping epidemics, other health breakthroughs, finishing polio,
and in this energy space — there can be a very upbeat message that his
administration is going to organize things, get rid of regulation barriers, and
have American leadership through innovation be on of the things that he gets
behind."
Gates,
who was scheduled to meet with Trump in person later Tuesday at Trump Tower in
midtown Manhattan, said he thought there was "a lot of fascination"
in identifying which "new directions" Trump would take the country
in.
He
added that Trump was not elected "so much for specific policies" but
because voters wanted "the kind of leadership" he presented.
"So
he has a lot of flexibility on which issues he really goes after," Gates
said. "And so that's why I think a dialogue now, you know, what are the
positive things for America that he's thinking and who can help out with
that?"
The
entrepreneur recently launched a billion-dollar initiative seeking to eliminate
greenhouse-gas emissions, which he discussed with Trump in the pair's recent
phone call. Gates told Bloomberg on Monday that the two discussed medicine and
education in addition to energy.
Speaking
about trade, Gates told CNBC he didn't think "it'd be a good deal" to
have US-China trade relations "really fall apart."
"They
won't want the lose-lose that you would get if you start to get large tariff
walls," Gates said, adding: "The president-elect is very
sophisticated, you know. I hope he's thought through how he's going to get some
adjustments there without that typical sort of tariff tit-for-tat."
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