Stabroek News Sunday

Under scrutiny, Trump decides to dissolve his foundation

-

(Reuters) - US President-elect Donald Trump said yesterday he intends to dissolve his charitable foundation, the Donald J Trump Foundation, which has been under investigat­ion by the New York attorney general.

Trump gave no timeline for winding down the foundation, but said in a statement that he wanted “to avoid even the appearance of any conflict with my role as President.” He directed his counsel to take the necessary steps for the dissolutio­n.

With less than four weeks to his January 20 inaugurati­on, the New York real estate magnate is under increasing pressure to reduce potential conflicts of interest ranging from his vast global business operations to his family’s philanthro­pic work.

This week, Trump said his son Eric would stop raising money for his own foundation over concerns that donors could be seen as buying access to the Trump family. The president-elect said it was a “ridiculous shame” that his son’s foundation would stop raising money.

Before Trump’s surprising election victory on November 8, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an in October directed the Donald J Trump Foundation to stop taking donations, saying the foundation violated state law requiring charitable organizati­ons that solicit outside donations to register with a state office.

Schneiderm­an’s order followed a series of reports in The Washington Post that suggested impropriet­ies by the foundation, including using its funds to settle legal disputes involving Trump businesses.

A spokeswoma­n for the attorney general’s office said yesterday that Trump cannot shutter the foundation while the investigat­ion is ongoing.

“The Trump Foundation is still under investigat­ion by this office and cannot legally dissolve until that investigat­ion is complete,” spokeswoma­n Amy Spitalnick said. She would not comment on expected timing for completing the investigat­ion.

Trump said he was “very proud” of the money raised by the foundation and said it had operated at “essentiall­y no cost for decades.”

“But because I will be devoting so much time and energy to the Presidency and solving the many problems facing our country and the world,” he added in his statement, “I don’t want to allow good work to be associated with a possible conflict of interest.”

The Trump Foundation, which was establishe­d in 1988, runs no programmes of its own. Instead, it donates to other nonprofit groups such as the Police Athletic League for youths.

Scrutiny of the Trump family’s philanthro­pic activities heightened in recent weeks following reports of access to the family for potential donors.

Eric Trump faced criticism for an online auction sponsored by his foundation, which raises money to help terminally ill children at St Jude Children’s Research Hospital, offering the highest bidder a chance to have coffee with his sister Ivanka.

After the announceme­nt that Eric would not be allowed to raise money for his foundation, Trump tweeted: “He loves these kids, has raised millions of dollars for them, and now must stop. Wrong answer!”

Trump’s critics, however, remembered how the president-elect had attacked his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, over their family foundation. In August, Trump urged the Justice Department to investigat­e the Clinton Foundation, which he called a “pay-to-play” operation that rewarded big donors with favours from the State Department while Clinton was secretary of state.

Eric Trump and his brother Donald Trump Jr also came under fire this week for their role in a postinaugu­ration charity event that offered a private reception with their father in exchange for a $1 million donation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana