Daily Dispatch

Trump’s daughter faces probe

Panel set to scrutinise claims that she used personal e-mails for work

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A Congressio­nal committee will investigat­e Ivanka Trump, US President Donald Trump’s daughter and a White House adviser, following reports she repeatedly used a personal e-mail account for government work, a House Democrat said on Tuesday.

A White House review of Ivanka Trump’s e-mail found she used her personal account up to 100 times last year to contact other Trump administra­tion officials, the Washington Post reported on Monday, citing people familiar with the review.

Use of a personal account for government business potentiall­y violates a law requiring preservati­on of all presidenti­al records.

President Trump, a Republican, repeatedly criticised his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al election campaign over her use of personal e-mail and a private server while she was US secretary of state.

Representa­tives for US Representa­tive Elijah Cummings, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, said the panel will investigat­e White House communicat­ions when Democrats take over the US House of Representa­tives in January.

“We plan to continue our investigat­ion of the presidenti­al records act and federal records act, and we want to know if Ivanka complied with the law,” his office said in a statement.

The current House Oversight committee chair, Republican Trey Gowdy, also asked the White House for informatio­n related to Ivanka Trump’s use of private e-mail in a letter on Tuesday.

Republican Senator Ron Johnson, chair of the Senate’s Homeland Security committee, asked for a briefing on the topic.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment, but Trump said his daughter’s use of her personal e-mail account was different from Clinton’s.

“For a little period of time, Ivanka did some e-mails. They weren’t classified like Hillary Clinton. They weren’t deleted like Hillary Clinton ... She wasn’t doing anything to hide her e-mails,” Trump told reporters. His daughter did not have a private server as Clinton did, Trump said.

Peter Mirijanian, a spokespers­on for Ivanka’s ethics lawyer, Abbe Lowell, told the Post the e-mails occurred before she was aware of government record-keeping regulation­s.

Since then, she has turned over all her government-related e-mails to be stored with other White House records, the Post reported.

Ivanka’s e-mails came to light when White House officials began reviewing them in response to a lawsuit from watchdog group American Oversight, according to the Post.

The New York Times also reported on Ivanka’s e-mail use.

Clinton’s e-mail practices as secretary of state prompted a Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion probe in the run-up to the 2016 election that still draws ire from Trump and calls from some of his supporters to “lock her up”.

The FBI concluded Clinton’s actions were extremely careless but did not recommend any charges be filed. Clinton expressed regret for her decision to use a private server but said she violated no rules.

Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat on the Senate Judiciary panel, said there was “no way” Ivanka did not know the rules after the 2016 campaign. There were also questions about the Trump family’s mixing of private enterprise and government duties, Blumenthal said.

“It raises the issue of whether there has been anything improper. There should be some kind of investigat­ion” either by Congress or the White House ethics office, Blumenthal said.

The White House began reviewing senior aides’ e-mail use last year after reports that Ivanka’s husband Jared Kushner, also a top White House adviser, used private e-mail for government work.

It raises the issue of whether there has been anything improper

 ?? Picture: AFP/MANDEL NGAN ?? FACING A FIRESTORM: Ivanka Trump used a personal e-mail account for government business in violation of federal records rules, The Washington Post reported on Monday.
Picture: AFP/MANDEL NGAN FACING A FIRESTORM: Ivanka Trump used a personal e-mail account for government business in violation of federal records rules, The Washington Post reported on Monday.

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