WEF Courts Lagarde As Next Leader After Founder's Abrupt Exit
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Schwab, 87, had initially intended to stay on until early 2027, the same year Lagarde's term as European Central Bank (ECB) president comes to an end, but he left last month amid accusations of financial misconduct and a clash with the Forum's directors. He denies any wrongdoing.
As the board deals with the fallout, it still sees Lagarde as the top candidate and has held internal discussions on the matter since Schwab's resignation last month, according to a person familiar with those conversations, who asked not to be identified. The conundrum is that Lagarde has more than two years left at the ECB and has previously said she will serve her term in full.
That effectively leaves the WEF without a clear choice to lead the organisation at a pivotal moment and needing to find a figure who can do it all: reforming the institution to address allegations of sexism and bullying from the Schwab era, while at the same time keeping CEOs paying membership fees that bring in hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue every year.
More More Downfall in Davos: Klaus Schwab fights for legacy after WEF whistleblower claimsThis content was published on May 15, 2025 The ousted head of the World Economic Forum is fighting allegations of impropriety and a second probe into his conduct in a year.
Read more: Downfall in Davos: Klaus Schwab fights for legacy after WEF whistleblower claim
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