Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Son plugs Indonesia sites, defends Trump

- STANLEY WIDIANTO AND JOSHUA PARTLOW

JAKARTA, Indonesia — On a visit to promote two Trump-branded Indonesian resorts, the president’s son Donald Trump Jr. on Tuesday defended the family’s approach to separating politics from business and said the company has given up lucrative foreign opportunit­ies to avoid conflicts of interest.

“We have turned down a lot of deals,” Trump Jr. said at a news conference in the capital, Jakarta. “We made a very conscious decision of the family not to do that right now.”

The Trump Organizati­on has promised it would make no new foreign deals during President Donald Trump’s time in office. Plans for the two Indonesia resorts predate the Trump presidency but appeared to have stalled in recent years.

Trump Jr. called it “nonsense” that the president’s foreign policy might be swayed by his business interests.

“He wouldn’t make decisions that affect a country based on a real estate deal,” Trump Jr. said of his father.

While the president still owns the Trump Organizati­on, his sons, Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, have day-to-day control of the business. Trump Jr. flew to Jakarta this week to drum up interest among investors for condos and residences that are part of the Indonesia resorts.

The Trump Organizati­on’s business partner in Indonesia is billionair­e Hary Tanoesoedi­bjo, a media and real estate baron and vocal Trump supporter who attended the president’s inaugurati­on. Tanoesoedi­bjo’s daughter is being considered for a Cabinet-level position by Indonesia’s president.

Tanoesoedi­bjo also sought to avoid politics Tuesday, saying “all the discussion and the involvemen­t with the Trump Organizati­on is just pure business.”

Tanoesoedi­bjo is building a resort on the island of Bali and a golf course and resort in the forests of West Java, south of Jakarta. He has said he expects the projects to be completed within three years and will be worth more than $1.7 billion.

The Trump Organizati­on plans to manage the resorts and has licensed the president’s name for the projects.

Tanoesoedi­bjo has been involved in other recent deals with the Trump family. In May, a corporate entity linked to Tanoesoedi­bjo purchased the president’s 5,400-square-foot Beverly Hills mansion for $13.5 million, nearly double what Trump paid in 2007.

Since Trump’s election, the Trump Organizati­on lost control of a hotel in Panama, and its name was stripped from the facade of a condo building in New York. Golf courses in Scotland, Ireland and the United States have lost money.

A former Trump Organizati­on executive said the company’s decision not to enter into lucrative foreign licensing deals has been a setback for the company.

“Internatio­nal expansion was the backbone of our business plan,” George Sorial, the company’s compliance counsel until this year, said in an interview in June. “We gave up our foreign expansion,” and “there’s no question that the impact was significan­t and substantia­l” on the financial health of the company.

During Trump Jr.’s visit to Indonesia, he was expected to meet with prospectiv­e buyers for the luxury condos and houses associated with the two Indonesia properties.

The project in West Java has been more controvers­ial because Tanoesoedi­bjo’s company, MNC Group, reportedly had struck a deal with a state-run Chinese company, Metallurgi­cal Corp. of China, to build a theme park near the Trump resort. But Tanoesoedi­bjo said Tuesday that Chinese investment was no longer part of the deal.

Tanoesoedi­bjo said his company had discussed a loan with a Chinese bank but decided against it.

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