The Star Malaysia

US$750K spent by six nations at Trump hotel

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Washington: The government­s of six countries spent more than US$750,000 at the Washington hotel owned by former president Donald Trump while trying to influence his administra­tion in 2017 and 2018, according to a congressio­nal committee report.

The spending – by officials from China, Malaysia, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates – was outlined in a report by the House Oversight Committee, which obtained documents from Mazars USA, Trump’s former accounting firm.

Representa­tive Carolyn Maloney, a Democrat from New York who chairs the committee, said the documents reveal that during the time the officials stayed at the Trumpowned hotel, “they were seeking to influence American foreign policy.”

The documents, Maloney added, “sharply call into question the extent to which President Trump was guided by his personal financial interest while in office rather than the best interests of the American people.”

According to the committee, a total of US$259,724 was spent at the Trump hotel in September 2017 by then-malaysian prime minister Najib Razak and his entourage.

Najib stayed in the hotel’s presidenti­al suite for US$10,000 per night, the committee said, spending US$44,562 over three days and another US$1,500 on a personal trainer.

Najib and members of his family were under investigat­ion by the Department of Justice at the time for looting a Malaysian sovereign wealth fund, the committee said.

It said that officials from Saudi Arabia and the UAE also spent hundreds of thousands of dollars at the Trump Hotel in 2017 and 2018, while the government­s of Turkey and China spent lesser amounts.

In a statement to The New York Times, Trump’s son Eric Trump said profit earned on the hotel stays was returned to the federal government through an annual payment to the Treasury Department.

“As a company, we went to tremendous lengths to avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest,” Eric said.

“Not due to any legal requiremen­t, but because of the respect we have towards the office of the presidency.”

The Trump Organizati­on sold the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel in Washington to an investor group in May 2022 for a reported Us$375mil.

In January last year, the Supreme Court shut down lawsuits claiming that Trump violated constituti­onal bars against a president accepting income from foreign sources, saying the cases were moot since Trump had left the White House.

These cases stemmed from the so-called emoluments clause of the US Constituti­on, which prohibits public officials from receiving gifts, payments or titles from foreign states without permission from

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