The
Trump Empire Expands
Donald Trump and his family continue to carve
out an unprecedented role for themselves as
America’s business-managers-in-chief.
By Nomi Prins
May 04,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- President Trump, his children and their
spouses aren’t just using the Oval Office to
augment their political legacy or secure future
riches. Okay, they certainly are doing that, but
that’s not the most useful way to think about
what’s happening at the moment. Everything will
make more sense if you reimagine the White House
as simply the newest branch of the Trump family
business empire, its latest outpost.
It turns out that the voters who cast their
ballots for Donald Trump, the patriarch, got a
package deal for his whole clan. That would
include, of course,
first daughter Ivanka
who, along with her husband, Jared Kushner, is
now a key political adviser to the president of
the United States. Both now have
offices in the White House
close to him. They have multiple
security clearances,
access to high-level leaders whenever they visit
the Oval Office or Mar-a-Lago and the perfect
formula for the sort of brand enhancement that
now seems to come with such eminence. President
Trump may have an
exceedingly “flexible” attitude
toward policymaking generally, but in one area
count on him to be stalwart and immobile: his
urge to run the White House like a business — a
family business.
The ways that Jared, “senior
adviser to the
president,” and Ivanka, “assistant
to the president,”
have already benefited from their links to “Dad”
in the first 100 days of his presidency stagger
the imagination. Ivanka’s company, for instance,
won three new trademarks
for its products from China on the
very day she dined with President Xi Jinping
at her father’s Palm Beach club.
In a similar fashion, thanks to her
chance to socialize
with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, her
company could be better positioned for deal
negotiations in his country. One of those perks
of family power includes nearing a licensing
agreement with Japanese apparel giant
Sanei International,
whose parent company’s largest stakeholder is
the Development Bank of Japan — an entity owned
by the Japanese government. We are supposed to
buy the notion that the
concurrent private viewing of Ivanka’s products
in Tokyo was a coincidence of the scheduling
fairy. Yet since her father became president,
you won’t be surprised to learn that global
sales of her merchandise have more or less gone
through the roof.
Here’s
where things get tricky. We can’t pinpoint the
exact gains generated from any one meeting of
the next generation Trump. They rely on the idea
that, because their brand was so huge to begin
with, profits and deals would have come anyway.
That’s why we won’t ever see their books or tax
returns.
Conflicts of interest? They now permeate the
halls of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., but none of
this will affect or change one thing President
Trump holds dear — and believe it or not, it’s
not the wishes of his base in the American
heartland. It’s advancing his flesh and blood,
and their flesh-and-blood-once-removed spouses
and relatives.
Federal
Regulations and Trump Family Interpretations
The Trumps and Kushners will behave in ways that
will benefit their global businesses. There’s
just one catch. They have to get away with it,
legally speaking. So the first law of family
business in the Oval Office turns out to be: get
stellar legal counsel. And they’ve done that.
Their lawyers have by now successfully created
trusts that theoretically — but only
theoretically — separate Ivanka from her
businesses and
deflect any accusations
over activities that may, now or in the future,
violate federal rules.
And there are two of those in particular to
consider.
The
Code of Federal Regulations
is a set of rules published by the executive
departments and agencies of the government.
Title 18 section 208
of that code deals with “acts affecting a
personal financial interest.” This
criminal conflict of interest statute
states “an officer or employee of the executive
branch of the United States government” can’t
have a “financial interest” in the result of
their duties. What that should mean, legally
speaking, for a family occupying the executive
office is: Ivanka could not have dinner with the
president of China while her business was
applying for and receiving
provisional approval of pending trademarks
from his country, if one of those acts might
impact the other. To an outsider, the connection
between those acts seems obvious enough and it’s
bound to be typical of what’s to come.
Meanwhile, there are real penalties for being
convicted of violating this rule. These include
fines or imprisonment or both as set forth in section
216 of Title 18.
Certain lawyers have argued
that Ivanka’s and
Jared’s appointments
don’t violate Rule 208 or other
nepotism statutes
because they are
not paid advisers
to the president. In other words, because Ivanka
doesn’t get a salary for her service to her… uh,
country… conflicts automatically vanish. She’s
already done her Trumptilian best to demonstrate
her affinity for ethical behavior by cordoning
herself off from her business responsibilities
(sort of).
According to The New York Times,
“Ivanka has transferred her brand’s assets into
a trust overseen by her brother-in-law, Josh
Kushner, and sister-in-law, Nicole Meyer.” Phew,
no family connections there! Or maybe she just
doesn’t care for her siblings-in-law.
But not all assets, it turns out, are created
equal. So the daughter-in-chief will, it seems,
keep her
stake in the Trump International Hotel,
a 15-minute stroll from the White House, which
just happens to boast “the
Ivanka Trump Suite”
and “The
Spa by Ivanka Trump.”
(“The Spa by Ivanka Trump™ and Fitness
Center transitions guests from the Technogym
setting of the Fitness Center to the tranquil
spa haven that is calming, balancing, purifying,
revitalizing and healing…”) There, many a
foreign diplomat or special interest mogul can
“calm, energize [and] restore” himself or
herself, while angling for an “in” with the
family. We don’t know precisely the nature of
what the Trump family stands to gain from the
hotel because its books aren’t made public, but
it’s reasonable to assume that we’re not talking
losses. Besides this other DC domain, Ivanka and
Jared will remain the beneficiaries of their
mutual business empires now valued at about
three quarters of a billion dollars, according
to
White House ethics filings.
But wait. There’s an even more explicit rule
against using public office (like, say, the
White House) for private gain:
Title 5 section 2635.702.
On that subject, the section states that “an employee shall
not use his public office for his own private
gain, for the
endorsement of any product, service or
enterprise, or for the private gain of friends,
relatives or persons with
whom the employee is affiliated
in a nongovernmental capacity.”
Okay,
that’s wordy. And though the rule doesn’t apply
to the president or vice president — we have
Nelson Rockefeller to thank for that, but more
on him later — for any other executive office
position, the rule explains that “status as an
employee is unaffected by pay or leave status.”
That means that you can’t say someone is not an
employee just because she isn’t drawing a
paycheck, which means she isn’t, in fact, exempt
just because she can’t show a W-2 form.
The second rule of family business is
undoubtedly: control the means of enforcement.
And President Trump just got
his man onto
the Supreme Court, so even if ethical charges
rose to the highest court in the land, the
family has at least a little insurance.
Bankers and
Presidents: A Walk Through History
The idea of powerful bloodlines collaborating is
nothing new in either business or politics. At
the turn of the 20th century, mogul
families routinely intermarried to spawn yet
more powerful and profitable business empires.
And when it comes to Oval Office politics,
American history is littered with
multigenerational public servants with blood
ties to presidents. Abraham Lincoln’s oldest
son, Robert, a Republican, served as
secretary of war in
the administrations of Presidents James Garfield
and Chester Arthur, and finally as US
minister to Great Britain during
President Benjamin
Harrison’s administration.
Dwight D. Eisenhower’s son, John, became a
decorated brigadier general, served as assistant
staff secretary in the White House while his
father was in office and was later appointed
ambassador to Belgium
under President Richard
Nixon (once his
father’s vice-president). But neither of them
inflated the coffers of the family business in
the process.
Whether family business connections might
influence prominent figures in the White House
isn’t a subject new to the Trump era either. In
1974, when Gerald Ford, who took over the
presidency after Richard Nixon’s impeachment,
nominated Nelson Rockefeller to be his vice
president,
Nelson’s brother David
ran the Chase Manhattan Bank (now JPMorgan
Chase). Questions naturally arose about the
notorious wealth and political reach of the
Rockefeller family. Nelson, the grandson of oil
magnate John D. Rockefeller, had even
worked at the bank
and had been on the boards of multiple oil
companies.
That same year, the Department of Justice
conveniently concluded that conflict of interest
laws
did not apply
to the office of the vice president — but not
before Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd asked, “Can’t
we at least agree… that the influence is there,
that it is a tremendous influence, that it is
more influence than any president or vice
president ever had?” And yet, as fabulously
wealthy and linked in as Nelson Rockefeller was,
his situation doesn’t even compare to the family
business tangle in the Trump White House.
There have been other family members than the
Trumps and Jared Kushner in positions of
significance in the White House. When, for
instance, Woodrow Wilson
fell gravely ill
in 1919, his second wife, Edith, stepped in to
act on his behalf, essentially running the
government in a blanket of secrecy from his
bedside. Her intention, however, was never to
make hay with a family business, but to ensure
that her husband’s policies prevailed. The two
Bush presidents, with a
business and
banking legacy
that snaked back a century, were elected, not
handed power. And though Bill Clinton’s reign in
the Oval Office enabled wife Hillary to garner
enough public recognition (and banking
connections) to successfully run for senator in
New York State, become secretary of state under
President Obama and launch two ultimately
unsuccessful presidential bids, the Clintons
only became
super wealthy
after Bill’s time in office. Though their
charity foundation’s
ties to foreign governments
remain suspect, they never had a private
business while Bill was in the White House.
What
can’t be found in the historical record is
someone’s child, wife or relations holding court
in the West Wing while expanding a family
business, no less a network of them. The present
situation, in other words, is unique in the
annals of American history. Only 100 days into
Donald Trump’s presidency, he already has
something of the look of the authoritarian
kleptocrats elsewhere on the planet who siphon
state wealth into their own bank accounts and
businesses.
And remember, the Trump empire is also the
Kushner empire. Jared’s
family business
depends on global investors hailing from
countries that just happen to be in his White
House portfolio. He, for example,
led the efforts
to prepare for the state visit to Mar-a-Lago of
the Chinese president (while the Kushner
business was
engaged in high-level talks
with a major Chinese financial conglomerate). A
Russian state-owned bank under US sanctions
whose chairman met with Jared in December
referred to him
as the head of Kushner Companies, though he was
already visibly if not yet officially a Trump
adviser.
He is similarly the administration’s point man
for Middle East “peace,” even though his family
has
financial relationships with Israel.
Meanwhile, in his role as
head of the newly formed White House Office of
American Innovation,
the potential opportunities to fuse government
and private business opportunities are likely to
prove endless.
Nepotism on Parade
Faced with the dynasty-crushing possibility of
selling his business or even placing it in a
blind trust, Donald Trump chose instead to let
his two older sons, Eric and Donald Jr., manage
it. Talk about smoke and mirrors. While
speaking with Forbes
in March, Eric indicated that he would provide
his father with updates on the Trump
Organization “quarterly” — but who truly
believes that father and sons won’t discuss the
family empire far more frequently than that?
The family has already racked up
a laundry list of global conflicts of interest
that suggest ways in which the White House is
likely to become a moneymaking vehicle for the
Trump line. There’s Turkey, for instance, where
the Trump Organization already has a substantial
investment, and where President Trump recently
called President Recip Tayyip Erdogan
to congratulate him on his power-grabbing,
anti-democratic victory in a disputed election
to change the country’s constitution. Given
Trump business interests globally, you could
multiply that call by the world.
Meanwhile, Ivanka’s brand isn’t just doing
business as usual, it’s killing it. Since 2017,
according to the Associated Press,
“global sales of Ivanka Trump merchandise have
surged.” As a sign of that, the brand’s imports,
mostly from China, have more than doubled over
the previous year. As for her husband, he
remained the CEO of Kushner Companies through
January, only then
abdicating his management role
in that real-estate outfit and 58 other
businesses, though remaining the sole primary
beneficiary of most of the associated family
trusts. His and Ivanka’s children are secondary
beneficiaries. That means any policy decision he
promotes could, for better or worse, affect the
family business and it doesn’t take a genius to
know which of those options he’s likely to
choose.
Kleptocrats, Inc.
Despite an already
mind-boggling set of existing conflicts of
interest,
ranging from
business affiliations
with oligarchs connected to the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard to
the Secret Service and
the Pentagon leasing
space in Trump
Tower (for at least $3 million per year), the
Trump family business is now looking to the
glorious long haul. The family is already
scouting for a
second hotel in
Washington. Trump has reportedly used nearly
$500,000 from early campaign money raised for
his own 2020 presidential bid to
bolster the biz.
It’s evidently been poured into “Trump-owned
restaurants, hotels and golf clubs,” as well as
rent at Trump Tower in New York City.
According to the latest polls, the
majority of registered voters
believe that the installation of Ivanka and
Jared in the White House is inappropriate. But
that could matter less to Donald Trump. Ask
Stephen Bannon
or
Chris Christie
what happens when Ivanka or Jared don’t like
you. That’s the family version of mob-style
power.
Ivanka
noted in her book, The Trump Card: Playing
to Win in Work and Life, that “in business,
as in life, nothing is ever handed to you.”
Except, of course, when your father is president
and he hands you the keys to grow the family
business on a silver platter.
Four decades ago, at a Senate hearing on his
potential conflicts of interest,
Vice President Rockefeller was asked,
“Can you separate the interests of big business
from the national interest when they
differ?” It’s a question some senator should
pose to Ivanka and Jared, replacing “big
business” with “big family business.”
Making the future yet murkier, the family may be
on the precipice of major problems. The most
striking of them: Kushner’s marquee building,
666 Fifth Ave. (an 80-story, ultra-luxury
Manhattan skyscraper) has a greater than
25 percent vacancy rate.
It hasn’t made enough money to even cover its
interest payments for several years, and in two
years it will have to
pay principal
as well on its $1.2 billion mortgage. That’s
going to hurt if foreign companies don’t step in
to stanch the flow of dollars out of the firm
and that, undoubtedly, could require a quid
pro quo or two.
In our
era, it’s no secret that presidents leave office
with the promise of quickly growing
exponentially wealthier. But for the first
family to gain such wealth while still in the
White House would be a first. Yet the process
that could make that possible already seems to
be well underway. All this, as Donald Trump, his
children, and his son-in-law continue to carve
out an unprecedented role for themselves as
America’s business-managers-in-chief, presiding
not so much over the country as over their own
expanding imperial domains.
Nomi Prins is the
author most recently of
All the Presidents’ Bankers: The Hidden
Alliances that Drive American Power.
She is a former Wall Street executive. Follow
her on Twitter:
@nomiprins.
This article was first published by
Tom
Dispatch
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.