Congress Investigates Suspicious Air Force Trips to Trump’s Scotland Resort
Violations of the Constitution’s emoluments clause have been an ongoing concern since Donald Trump moved into the White House. But the latest scandals appear to take this administration’s grifting to a new level.
According to a report in Politico, Congress is investigating alleged stopovers made by an Air National Guard crew last spring at Trump’s Turnberry resort in Scotland. The five-person crew aboard a C-17 military transport plane was headed to the Middle East, and both on the way there and on the way back, the crew apparently stayed at Trump’s financially struggling resort.
That would be abnormal in any administration, and while some in Washington may have been quick to brush off the Trump’s family’s other alleged emoluments violations, this story—if true—won’t be so easily dismissed, as it involves using the military to personally enrich the president and his family.
In June, members of the House Oversight Committee sent then-acting Defense Secretary Patrick M. Shanahan a letter requesting documents related to Defense Department expenditures at Trump Turnberry or Trump International Golf Links, as well as communications between the Defense Department and Trump’s businesses. It also sought information regarding expenditures at the Glasgow Prestwick Airport.
The letter noted that Trump spent “hundreds of millions of dollars” to buy and renovate the Turnberry golf course two years before the 2016 presidential election in the U.S. “To date, the property has continued to suffer financial losses and has not returned a profit for the President or his companies,” it added.
Lawmakers also pointed out that the Glasgow Prestwick Airport “has lost millions” since its purchase by the Scottish government in 2013. In light of this, it’s curious that the Pentagon since October 2017 has spent $11 million on fuel purchase orders at the airport, when fuel is much cheaper at U.S. military bases.
The crew of the C-17 military transport plane was headed to Kuwait to deliver supplies, Politico reported. Normally, such flights would be routed through one of about four U.S. air bases in Germany, the U.K., Spain, or Italy. There was no apparent reason it needed to stop at Trump’s property in Scotland.