Waterloo Region Record

Trump vs. Nordstrom: The latest bout raising ethical concerns

Tweet criticizin­g retailer crosses line: expert

- Anne D’Innocenzio and Bernard Condon

NEW YORK — The White House is rushing to the defence of Ivanka Trump’s company — the latest sign the president can’t seem to separate the presidency from his family’s businesses.

United States President Donald Trump added to a string of presidenti­al firsts on Wednesday, and drew fire from ethics lawyers, with a Twitter attack on Nordstrom. The Seattle-based retailer stoked Trump’s rage by dropping his daughter Ivanka’s clothing and accessory line.

The implicatio­n, intended or not: Hurt my daughter’s business, and the Oval Office will come after you.

“My daughter Ivanka has been treated so unfairly by @Nordstrom,” the president tweeted. “She is a great person — always pushing me to do the right thing! Terrible!”

The government-led cheerleadi­ng for Ivanka Trump’s private enterprise didn’t end there.

White House counsellor Kellyanne Conway, in an interview Thursday with Fox News from the White House briefing room, encouraged people to “go buy Ivanka’s stuff.” She boasted that she was giving the brand “a free commercial here.”

While Trump himself is not subject to the standards of ethical conduct for federal employees, Conway is. Among the rules: An employee shall not use his or her office “for the endorsemen­t of any product, service or enterprise.”

Ivanka Trump does not have a specific role in the White House but moved to Washington with her husband, who is one of Trump’s closest advisers. She followed her father’s approach on business ties by handing over control of her fashion company but retaining ownership of it.

Though Trump has tweeted about companies such as Boeing, Carrier and General Motors, ethics experts say this time was different. It involved his daughter’s business, which raises conflict-of-interest concerns.

White House spokespers­on Sean Spicer said Trump was responding to an “attack on his daughter” when he posted the tweet and that “he has every right to stand up for his family and applaud their business activities, their success.”

The Ivanka Trump flare-up follows revelation­s that first lady Melania Trump expected to develop “multimilli­on-dollar business relationsh­ips” tied to her presence in the White House, according to a lawsuit she filed on Monday.

Ethics experts have criticized Trump’s plan to separate himself from his sprawling real estate business by handing managerial control to his two adult sons. The experts want him to sell his company. Most modern presidents have sold their financial holdings and put the cash raised in a blind trust.

Kathleen Clark, a government ethics expert, said the Nordstrom tweet is problemati­c because other retailers may think twice now about dropping the Ivanka Trump brand for fear of getting criticized publicly by the president. She said it was especially disturbing that Trump retweeted his message on the official White House account.

“The implicit threat was that he will use whatever authority he has to retaliate against Nordstrom, or anyone who crosses his interest,” said Clark, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis.

Clark defended the president’s right to use his personal Twitter account to express his views, however. She noted that government workers recently set up alt-EPA accounts to criticize the president’s policies. “A government employee, even a president, is allowed to tweet in his personal capacity.”

One of the president’s fiercest ethics critics, Norman Eisen, described the tweet differentl­y — a “bullying” tactic beneath the dignity of the president’s office.

“This is a shot across the bow to everybody who is doing business with Trump or his family,” said Eisen, who was former president Barack Obama’s chief ethics counsellor. “It’s warning them: Don’t withdraw their business.”

Nordstrom reiterated Wednesday that its decision was based on the brand’s performanc­e, not politics. The company said sales of Ivanka Trump items had steadily declined over the past year, particular­ly in the last half of 2016, “to the point where it didn’t make good business sense for us to continue with the line for now.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ivanka Trump, daughter of U.S. President Donald Trump, arrives at Trump Tower in New York. The White House is coming to her defence after Nordstrom removed her line of merchandis­e from the store.
EVAN VUCCI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ivanka Trump, daughter of U.S. President Donald Trump, arrives at Trump Tower in New York. The White House is coming to her defence after Nordstrom removed her line of merchandis­e from the store.

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