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Howard Schultz, the billionaire former Starbucks CEO, said in January in a "60 Minutes" interview that he is seriously considering running for president in 2020 as a centrist independent.
Howard Schultz was born in 1953 and raised in a housing project in Brooklyn, New York. His new book, "From the Ground Up," makes it clear that he still carries the weight of several traumatic ...
Howard Schultz left the board of Starbucks this week, and insiders say it’s because he realized he had become a “distraction” for the coffee giant.
The possible entrance of former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz into the 2020 race as an independent candidate has made Democrats and some never-Trump Republicans really, really, really, really, nervous.
Speaking at The Times’s DealBook D.C. policy forum, Howard Schultz said safety concerns have prompted Starbucks to reconsider its 2018 policy on customer use of restrooms.
Howard Schultz’s presidential ambitions spurred a months-long effort to disrupt the 2020 race. January 29, 2019. Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz said on Jan. 29 that he believes he "can beat ...
Howard Schultz does not. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who is running for president, wants a 2 percent tax on family wealth above $50 million. Howard Schultz does not.
Howard Schultz wants to run for president as that curious but hardy perennial, the un-politician. “I strongly believe we are living in a time that demands a re-imagining of our current political ...
From independent presidential bids to third-parties, several prominent businessmen have tried to upend America's two-party system in recent decades.
Howard Schultz remembers the moment he decided Starbucks would be more than just a coffee company. Decades ago, an employee told Schultz -— who was CEO at the time -— that he had AIDS.
Howard Schultz, taking over the reins of the coffee giant once again, told employees that he would suspend the coffee giant's stock repurchasing program in order to refocus its capital on employees.
How Howard Schultz could become president March 1, 2019 More than 6 years ago Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz said in an interview aired on Jan. 27 that he may run for president as an independent.