Chattanooga Times Free Press

Want dinner with Trump Jr.? You’re probably too late

- BY MUNEEZA NAQVI

NEW DELHI — Want an evening out in India with Donald Trump Jr.? Sorry, even if you have an extra $39,000 it’s probably too late to buy a “conversati­on and dinner” with the eldest son of the American president.

For more than a week, full-page newspaper ads promised a Friday night dinner with Trump Jr. to buyers who put down a $39,000 deposit for an apartment in a new Trump project in a New Delhi suburb.

But the money had to be paid, the ads said, before Thursday.

Officials at M3M, the Indian company that will build the new Trump complex, did not immediatel­y respond when asked whether late-comers would be allowed for dinner.

Trump Jr., who has run the Trump Organizati­on with his brother Eric since his father took office, arrived in India on Tuesday to promote Trump-brand real estate projects across the country. He is also slated to make a speech about Indo-Pacific relations at a business summit in New Delhi, along with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

More than 85 apartments, worth $108 million, have been sold in the yetto-be-built Trump Towers in Gurgaon, on the outskirts of the Indian capital, said Kalpesh Mehta of Tribeca Developers, Trump Organizati­on’s Indian partner. Apartments in the complex, which is scheduled to be completed by 2023, cost from $775,000 to $1.5 million.

On Monday alone, the day before Trump Jr. landed in India, buyers scooped up $15 million in apartments, Mehta told ET-Now television earlier this week. The station is owned by the Times Group, a sponsor of the Global Business Summit where Trump Jr. will speak.

Media access to Trump Jr. has been limited, with only hand-picked journalist­s allowed access to events he attends.

The Trump Organizati­on charges a licensing fee to Indian partners who build the properties under the Trump name. One complex is already open in the central city of Pune, while four others are in varying stages of constructi­on, one each in Mumbai and Kolkata and two in Gurgaon.

All the deals were signed before President Trump took office, but Trump Jr.’s promotiona­l trip has raised ethics concerns.

On Thursday, White House spokeswoma­n Lindsay E. Walters said the Trump administra­tion “takes seriously its obligation to ensure that government resources are not used to provide a private benefit to anyone. Donald Trump Jr. is a private individual and neither the State Department nor the White House has provided any support for this trip beyond coordinati­ng with his Secret Service protection.”

Trump Jr. has made several visits to India over the years and has repeatedly talked of the country’s business opportunit­ies, dismissing criticism that his family-owned business is profiting from his father’s presidency.

“It really discounts the work that my father and myself and my siblings did to build up the business as an internatio­nal brand,” he told ET-Now.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States