What you can do about Trump’s many, many conflicts of interest
In the days leading up to Trump’s inauguration, Fusion is highlighting some of the issues most important to our readers and what to do to prepare for the incoming administration. Today we’re addressing—dun dun dun—political corruption.
What Trump has been up to:
To paraphrase writer Lauren Chanel Allen, Donald Trump has been one serial abuser of Take Your Daughter to Work Day. While he promised to disentangle his businesses from his presidency, evidence of that remains to be seen.
After all, who could forget the fiasco (and the $25 million settlement) that was Trump University? And that’s only the tip of the iceberg. As the campaign wound down, Trump channeled approximately $3 million in campaign cash toward his own businesses. His foundation also admitted to the IRS that it had broken federal regulations by using their clients’ money to act in the foundation’s best interests, and not that of their clients. New York officials are also investigating the charity to see if Trump personally benefited from it. Trump’s insistence on splitting his time between the White House and Trump Tower means the federal government (aka we, the people) and the city of New York will fork out extra cash for increased security. Oh, and the Secret Service (paid courtesy of your tax dollars) may have to sign rent checks to—you guessed it—Trump himself in order to protect him. Foreign diplomats say they’ll be staying at Trump hotels as an “easy, friendly gesture” to the president-elect. But even Trump’s promise that he would donate that foreign money to the treasury raises more questions than it answers. And those are just a couple ways Trump stands to make money from the presidency.
But perhaps most troubling is the nepotism and conflicts of interest that Trump is inviting into the White House. Trump has said he will leave his businesses to his sons in a “blind trust”—except, that’s not what a blind trust is. At all. Ivanka’s role in her father’s day-to-day dealings remains nebulous, but she has already served as close adviser and surrogate on the campaign and has even sat in on high-level meetings with foreign leaders. She recently stepped away from her businesses, leaving the door open for her to get further involved in shaping her father’s agenda. Trump has also tapped his son-in-law Jared Kushner to serve as a senior adviser—all of which may defy nepotism laws. Members of Trump’s transition team, who are charged with staffing various government agencies, also carry a number of potential conflicts of interest because of their previous lobbying efforts. And interestingly enough, quite a few members of Trump’s inner circle have ties to Russia—including his proposed Secretary of State. Maybe that’s why the GOP felt it necessary to try and gut an independent congressional ethics panel?