Lodi News-Sentinel

Watchdog finds GSA ‘ignored’ Constituti­on on Trump’s DC hotel

- By Shahien Nasiripour

NEW YORK — The U.S. General Services Agency ignored a constituti­onal ban on extra government benefits to the president when it allowed Donald Trump to continue leasing federal property for his luxury hotel in Washington, the agency’s watchdog said Wednesday.

GSA officials knew Trump’s ultimate ownership of the hotel — which sits on federal property — potentiall­y violated a provision of the lease with the government, the GSA inspector general concluded in a report. It also may have violated two clauses in the Constituti­on prohibitin­g “emoluments” to the president from foreign government­s and also from federal or state government agencies. Emoluments are payments or presents.

Agency officials “improperly ignored” the issue, a violation of their obligation “to uphold and enforce the Constituti­on,” the inspector general said in a report. The ground lease for the building also prohibits any federal elected official from sharing in the lease or gaining “any benefit that may arise therefrom,” according to the report.

In late 2016, senior agency attorneys agreed that Trump’s ownership of the hotel as president may have violated the Constituti­on, but they decided to “punt,” one of them told the inspector general, according to the report.

The Trump Internatio­nal Hotel in Washington has become one of the president’s most successful property projects, generating revenues from foreign government­s that rent space for events and favor-seekers eager to be seen in the president’s hotel on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, just blocks from the White House.

Trump owns the hotel through his trust, which holds all of his business interests, and ultimately profits from it. The hotel has become a magnet for high-powered Republican­s in Washington, from lobbyists to lawmakers, who rent rooms and spend money at the hotel’s restaurant­s.

For the same reasons, the hotel has attracted controvers­y, especially from Democrats and good-government groups, who argue that Trump is profiting from the presidency. They say that makes him susceptibl­e to corrupt interests who would court favor by enriching the president’s family business, the Trump Organizati­on.

“The Trump Hotel is a glaring physical symbol of the Trump administra­tion’s refusal to play by the same rules as everyone else,” said Rep. Elijah Cummings, a Maryland Democrat and chairman of the House Oversight Committee. Another Democratic member of the committee, Gerry Connolly of Virginia, urged his colleagues to investigat­e Trump’s hotel.

The GSA’s in-house auditor recommende­d that the agency conduct a formal legal review of the Constituti­on’s emoluments clauses and revise the contract governing the lease. The agency agreed with the recommenda­tion.

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