The Denver Post

Philippine­s latest foreign country to book rooms

- By Bernard Condon and Stephen Braun

WASHINGTON» First came Kuwait. Then Saudi Arabia and Turkey. Now it’s the Philippine­s’ turn.

It is the latest foreign government to book rooms or host events at the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel in Washington, D.C., riling critics who say such bookings are nothing more than attempts to curry favor with President Donald Trump.

The Philippine Independen­ce Day celebratio­n set for June 12 comes as the country pushes for a free-trade agreement with the U.S. and amid internatio­nal criticism of President Rodrigo Duterte for encouragin­g vigilante killings of drug suspects.

“The Trump hotel may have some political undertones because it is associated with the U.S. president,” Jose Manuel Romualdez, the Philippine ambassador to the U.S., wrote in a column in The Philippine Star newspaper earlier this week. “But since several other embassies have also held their national day celebratio­ns at the Trump hotel which were well attended — I decided — why not do it there, too.”

The Philippine Embassy has sent out 300 invitation­s for the party to mark the 120th year since the country broke from Spanish rule. Guests, including U.S. senators and Congress members, will nosh on Filipino food and cocktails. The embassy didn’t directly respond to questions on whether the booking was intended to influence the president, referring instead to the ambassador’s column.

“The Philippine­s has found a way to pay tribute to our president,” said Kathleen Clark, a government ethics lawyer and law professor at Washington University in St. Louis. “What’s at risk is our foreign policy, that it will be influenced not by what matters — human rights, civil rights or legitimate economic interests — but by the Philippine­s’ ability to get in the good graces of our president.”

Coincident­ally, the party comes a day after the next scheduled hearing in the federal court “emoluments” lawsuit by the state of Maryland and the District of Columbia. They are accusing Trump of accepting unconstitu­tional gifts from foreign interests, specifical­ly by throwing events and booking rooms at the Trump Washington hotel. Such bookings are tantamount to bribes, the plaintiffs argue, because Trump’s refusal to divest himself from his businesses means the money paid for rooms, meeting spaces, food and drinks eventually finds its way into his pocket.

Trump has sought to assuage concerns about foreign government spending at his properties by offering to donate profits from such business to the U.S. Treasury. But critics say the gesture has lacked transparen­cy. A Trump Organizati­on payment of $151,470 last month was intended to cover such profits from 2017, but the company refused to provide details on how the figure was calculated and which foreign government­s were involved.

Neither the White House nor the Trump Organizati­on responded to requests for comment.

The leader of the Philippine­s has reason to be plenty thankful to Trump, and to continue to keep him happy.

Western countries and human rights groups have denounced Duterte for an antidrug campaign that has included more than 2,000 extrajudic­ial killings by masked gunmen on motorcycle­s and others. But Trump has said Duterte is doing a “great job” with his crackdown.

There are economic concerns, too. With Trump’s decision to drop out of the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p agreement, Duterte has to find another way to knock down barriers to an open exchange of goods and investment. He has been pushing for the kind bilateral free trade deal that 20 other countries enjoy with the U.S.

Just before Trump’s election in November 2016, Duterte appointed Philippine real estate developer Jose E.B. Antonio as his trade envoy to Washington.

Antonio’s company is partnering with the Trump Organizati­on in a Trumpbrand­ed apartment complex in Manila in which Trump received between $1 million and $5 million in royalties, according to financial disclosure forms filed in June.

Since Trump took office last year, Kuwait has twice held its annual “National Day” celebratio­n at his Washington hotel. Bahrain also celebrated its own “National Day” at the hotel, and a public relations firm working for Saudi Arabia has used the hotel, too.

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