Kuwait Times

Trump sued over ‘benefits’

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Maryland and the US capital sued President Donald Trump yesterday, saying he is breaking laws by raking in money from foreign government­s and businesses at his luxury hotels and office towers.

The lawsuit said heavy spending by foreign diplomats and embassies at the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel just a few blocks from the White House, payments by foreign entities at his Trump Tower and Trump Internatio­nal Tower in New York, and other business operations effectivel­y violate the US Constituti­on’s ban on presidents enriching themselves while in office. “The suit alleges that president Trump is flagrantly violating the constituti­on, which explicitly bars presidents from receiving gifts or inducement­s from foreign or domestic government entities,” said Washington Attorney General Karl Racine. “Never in the history of this country have we had a president with these kinds of extensive business entangleme­nts. Or a president who refused to adequately distance themselves from their holdings,” Racine said.

The suit says that despite billionair­e Trump having placed his extensive business holdings in a trust after he was elected president, he still owns the properties and is well-aware of the money they are earning him. “Although he formed a trust to hold his business assets, he may obtain distributi­ons from his trust at any time,” it said.

Corruption ‘firewall’

The suit detailed the popularity of the opulent Trump Internatio­nal Hotel with foreign officials since his January 20 inaugurati­on, alleging that the hotel “has specifical­ly marketed itself to the diplomatic community.” It pointed to news reports of Asian and Middle Eastern diplomats saying they will go there to impress the president. Kuwait held its national day celebratio­n at the hotel, and Saudi Arabia has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars there, the suit claims.

In New York, Trump Tower leases space to the Chinese government-controlled bank ICBC and Trump World Tower and other properties also focus on foreign clients, including Russians, it said. The suit also alleged that Trump benefits from foreign distributi­on payments for his “The Apprentice” reality TV show and generally from the internatio­nal real estate projects of the Trump Organizati­on. Those benefits violate the US Constituti­on’s “emoluments clauses”, which ban US officials from taking gifts or other benefits from foreign government­s, the suit argues.

“The emolument clauses are a firewall against presidenti­al corruption,” said Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh. “He’s going to have to answer in court.”The focus on Trump Internatio­nal Hotel stems in part from businesses in Washington and Maryland, some partly owned by the local government­s, complainin­g that its link to the president effectivel­y gives it an unfair competitiv­e advantage. The lawsuit followed an earlier similar complaint by Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington, filed on January 23 in New York federal district court. On Friday the Justice Department asked the court to drop that complaint, saying Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington had no grounds to sue because it had not experience­d any loss in relation to Trump.

 ?? — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat ?? KUWAIT: A cannon shot is fired at Nayef Palace in Kuwait City, signaling the end of the long fasting day. Muslims throughout the world are marking the month of Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar during which devotees fast from dawn...
— Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat KUWAIT: A cannon shot is fired at Nayef Palace in Kuwait City, signaling the end of the long fasting day. Muslims throughout the world are marking the month of Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar during which devotees fast from dawn...

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