Las Vegas Review-Journal

White House job requiremen­t: A nondisclos­ure agreement

- By Julie Hirschfeld Davis, Maggie Haberman, Michael D. Shear and Katie Rogers New York Times News Service

As a real estate executive and reality TV star, Donald Trump tightly controlled his image by insisting that everyone around him sign nondisclos­ure agreements threatenin­g steep monetary penalties if they revealed anything about him or his company.

A few months into his presidency, Trump — infuriated by leaks about everything from staff rivalries to his bathrobe-wearing, Tv-viewing habits — ordered Reince Priebus, then his chief of staff, to do the same thing in the West Wing.

To calm Trump, Donald F. Mcgahn II, the White House counsel, drew up a broad document barring White House officials from publicly disclosing what they heard and saw at work. But he privately told senior aides that it was mainly meant to placate an agitated president, who was convinced that the people around him had to be pressured into keeping his secrets. Mcgahn made it clear the agreement could not ultimately be enforced, according to several people who signed.

The nondisclos­ure agreement, presented by Priebus to the senior staff last April, did not specify any penalties — financial or otherwise — for breaking it. But it was an early indication that Trump, who spent decades using pressure tactics and secrecy in his private life, wanted to do the same thing at the White House, breaking with tradition. He would push the obsession of many of his predecesso­rs with damaging leaks to a new level.

And if the potential for punishment seemed remote to his top aides, the message from the president was clear: keep quiet.

The White House declined to provide a copy of the two- to three-page document, which was described by several current and former White House officials who signed it and insisted on anonymity to discuss it. A spokesman would not say whether senior officials were required to sign such an agreement.

But former White House lawyers and government ethics experts said the agreement raised serious legal questions and reflected Trump’s refusal to submit to the norms of public disclosure or respect the basic right of free speech.

“You can’t blanket wipe out

 ?? AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Senior staffers in President Donald Trump’s administra­tion are sworn into office in February 2017 at the White House. As a reality TV star, Trump tightly controlled his image by insisting that those around him sign nondisclos­ure agreements; a few...
AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES Senior staffers in President Donald Trump’s administra­tion are sworn into office in February 2017 at the White House. As a reality TV star, Trump tightly controlled his image by insisting that those around him sign nondisclos­ure agreements; a few...

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