Houston Chronicle

Conflicts of interest prompt a Trump choice to withdraw

- By Julie Bykowicz

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s pick for deputy commerce secretary has withdrawn from considerat­ion.

Todd Ricketts, a coowner of the Chicago Cubs baseball team and son of TD Ameritrade founder Joe Ricketts, was unable to resolve conflict-of-interest issues in taking the No. 2 job at the department.

Ricketts says in a statement that he is “deeply honored” that Trump nominated him for the post, a selection he made at the end of November.

“I offer my continued support for President Trump and his administra­tion, and the important work they are doing to promote economic opportunit­y,” Ricketts said.

During the presidenti­al campaign, Ricketts helped raise at least $66 million for outside groups called Future 45 and 45 Committee — a nod to Trump as the incoming 45th president.

But before helping Trump, Ricketts belonged to a super political action committee that spent more than any other trying to stop Trump from winning the Republican presidenti­al nomination.

The 47-year-old has diverse business interests — from a bicycle shop in Chicago to sitting on the board of directors at TD Ameritrade. He would have served under Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

Neither a spokesman for Ross nor the White House immediatel­y responded to requests for comment.

Trump has filled his administra­tion with wealthy, high-profile business leaders who came with largerthan-usual business conflicts. The picks have had to work with the Office of Government Ethics to resolve them, a process that involves either selling off assets or agreeing to sit out discussion­s that directly involve their financial interests.

In most cases, the new employees have reached ethics deals.

For example, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson divested his holdings at Exxon Mobil Corp., where he was chairman and chief executive officer, before taking his position. The move cost him about $7 million from his retirement deal, although he’d been set to leave the company even before taking the post.

But Ricketts joins a few other wealthy nominees in concluding their new positions didn’t make financial sense for their families.

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