Congressional Democrats sue Trump over foreign payments
WASHINGTON — Democratic lawmakers are suing President Donald Trump over foreign money flowing into his global business empire.
Almost 200 senators and representatives are plaintiffs in a lawsuit alleging Trump is violating the so-called emoluments clause of the Constitution. It was filed early Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the lawmakers said.
The plaintiffs argue they have standing to sue because the clause says only Congress may approve foreign gifts and payments.
“The framers gave Congress a unique role, a unique right and responsibility,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat who helped organize the lawsuit.
Although Trump turned over control of his real estate development and marketing company to his adult sons and a senior executive, he did not divest from it. That means he stands to benefit financially from the Trump Organization’s profits, including from foreign governments.
Since he’s become president, the Trump Organization has secured dozens of potentially valuable patents, including in China, and collected fees from lobbyists working for Saudi Arabia and other countries using his properties.
The new suit — the third of its kind — says the full scope of foreign payments to the Trump Organization cannot be known because the president has not made public his income tax returns.
This week, two Democratic attorneys general filed a similar claim. Trump and the Justice Department have called these lawsuits baseless.
Rep. John Conyers, a Michigan Democrat, said he and Blumenthal have amassed the “greatest number of congressional plaintiffs on any lawsuit against a president.”
He said they’re taking the action “not out of any sense of pleasure or partisanship but because President Trump has left us with no other option.”