http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/05/business/05obama.htmlWASHINGTON — President Obama is moving to cool down his war with the United States Chamber of Commerce, one of the most bitter political feuds of the last two years...
This week, the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, met with the chief executive, Thomas J. Donohue, to discuss international economic issues. In his news conference on Wednesday, Mr. Obama came close to conceding the chamber’s main argument, that American businesses had concluded — wrongly, in Mr. Obama’s view — that his policies were antibusiness. “I think business took the message that, well, gosh, it seems like we may be always painted as the bad guy,” Mr. Obama told reporters. He acknowledged that a relationship with the business community had not been “managed by me as well as it needed to be.”...
In the news conference, Mr. Obama did not mention the chamber. But he seemed to suggest that his often-repeated goal of creating “new rules of the road” for business needed to be better balanced against a new appreciation for the need to buck up firms that were struggling in the faltering economy. “I’ve got to take responsibility in terms of making sure that I make clear to the business community as well as to the country that the most important thing we can do is to boost and encourage our business sector, and make sure that they’re hiring,” Mr. Obama said. “We do have specific plans in terms of how we can structure that outreach.”...
The administration official said the meeting with Mr. Donohue was “actually pretty constructive on the international economic front.” In an interview, Tami Overby, the vice president for Asia at the Chamber of Commerce, said she would give Mr. Obama “high marks” for his recent work to complete a trade pact with South Korea. Mr. Obama said his administration had already been “talking to C.E.O.’s constantly.”... In his remarks, Mr. Obama hinted at a new direction from the White House that could help reassure businesses. “I think setting the right tone publicly is going to be important,” he said, “and could end up making a difference at the margins in terms of how businesses make investment decisions.”