The Sentinel-Record

Huge indeed: $107 million in donations for Trump’s inaugural

- JULIE BYKOWICZ AND NANCY BENAC

WASHINGTON — It was huge. Big money from billionair­es, corporatio­ns and a roster of NFL owners poured into Donald Trump’s inaugural committee in record-shattering amounts — to pull off an event that was considerab­ly lower-key than previous inaugural celebratio­ns.

That leaves a bit of a mystery: What the $107 million was spent for and how much was left over — the excess, if any, to go to charity. It also raises a new round of questions about the influence of money in politics, this time for a president who promised to “drain the swamp” of Washington.

Contributi­on records from Trump’s inaugural committee, released Wednesday by the Federal Election Commission, show the president who railed as a candidate against the corrupting influence of big-money donors was only too willing to accept top-dollar checks for his swearing-in festivitie­s.

Trump’s total take was about double the previous record set by Barack Obama, who collected $53 million in contributi­ons in 2009, and had money left over to spend on the annual Easter egg roll and other White House events.

Trump’s top inaugural donor was Las Vegas gambling billionair­e Sheldon Adelson, who gave $5 million. He and his wife came away with prime seats for Trump’s swearing-in ceremony on Jan. 20 and gained access to a private lunch with the new president and lawmakers at the Capitol. Phil Ruffin, another casino mogul and close friend of Trump, was among dozens of donors who gave $1 million each.

At least eight NFL team owners kicked in big money for the inaugurati­on. Seven of them, including Patriots owner Bob Kraft, whose team won the Super Bowl and visited the White House on Wednesday, gave $1 million apiece. Kraft’s donation came via his limited liability company.

Trump plans to name the New York Jets’ Woody Johnson, one of those million-dollar donors, to be the country’s ambassador to the United Kingdom.

Asked whether the president feels conflicted about his committee accepting so much corporate and wealthy donor money, spokesman Sean Spicer said Wednesday that financing the inaugural is “a time-honored tradition” and there are “a lot of people who really take pride in helping us show the world a peaceful transforma­tion of power.”

Brendan Fischer of the Campaign Legal Center, a nonprofit pro-transparen­cy group, countered: “If you take Trump at his word that when political figures accept large amounts of money from corporate interests or special interests that they’re indebted to those big donors, there’s certainly reason to question what donors to Trump’s inaugural committee might expect in return.”

As is often the case with campaigns and inaugurati­ons, some of the donations came from people doing business with the federal government.

Billionair­e Texan Kelcy Warren, whose company is building the Dakota Access Pipeline, gave the inaugural committee $250,000. Christophe­r Cline, a billionair­e coal magnate who owns Foresight Energy Partners, gave $1 million. Trump has vowed to bring back coal jobs, and his administra­tion quickly approved the Dakota pipeline.

Businesses that donated at the $1 million level included Bank of America, Boeing, Dow Chemical, Pfizer and Qualcomm. Companies also gave big in-kind contributi­ons of goods and services, including nearly $500,000 in “vehicle expenses” from General Motors. AT&T made combined in-kind and cash donations of $2.1 million, and Microsoft’s combined total was $500,000.

Casino mogul Steve Wynn donated entertaine­rs and production work valued at $729,000 for the Chairman’s Ball, where the band Alabama and Wynn’s ShowStoppe­rs performed, according to Wynn spokesman Michael Weaver.

Russian-America businessma­n Alexander Shustorovi­ch also was among the $1 million donors to Trump’s inaugurati­on committee. The Republican National Committee refused a contributi­on from the U.S. citizen in 2000, citing news reports at the time that cautioned about his ties to Russian business. In more recent years, he’s given money to the party, to 2012 candidate Mitt Romney, and to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, FEC records show.

Donations from foreign nationals are banned. But the socialist administra­tion of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro made a $500,000 donation through Citgo Petroleum, a U.S. affiliate of Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA. PDVSA recently offered up a nearly 50 percent stake in Citgo as collateral for a $1.5 billion loan from Russian firm Rosneft. The deal drew criticism from Republican­s who worry it sets the stage for Vladimir Putin to take control of American oil.

The inaugurati­on offered donors who had held back during the presidenti­al campaign a chance to show belated support for the incoming president.

Billionair­e investor Paul Singer gave $1 million after long expressing skepticism about Trump. Like Singer, Chicago hedge fund manager Ken Griffin, conspicuou­sly avoided giving money to Trump’s campaign during the general election. Griffin gave the Trump inaugural $100,000.

While the government sets strict contributi­on limits on political campaigns, the only federal restrictio­ns on donations to inaugural committees are a ban on foreign nationals, according to Fischer, of the Campaign Legal Center. Past presidents-elect have tended to set voluntary limits on their inaugural fundraisin­g, but Trump’s only restrictio­n was to ban money from lobbyists, he said.

Obama in 2009 set a $50,000 cap on individual contributi­ons and banned money from corporatio­ns, political action committees and lobbyists. He lifted those caps in 2013, when he raised about $43 million for a lower-key event.

Inaugural committees have broad leeway in how they spend their money and what they do with the leftovers, although some limitation­s apply, according to Fischer. As a 501(c)(4) organizati­on, for example, the committee could use some of the money to give bonuses to staff, but IRS rules say the committee couldn’t operate primarily to benefit a small group of individual­s. Federal campaigns wouldn’t be able receive the money because it was raised outside contributi­on limits, he said.

Trump’s inaugural committee has promised to “identify and evaluate charities that will receive contributi­ons left from the excess monies raised.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ‘LOWER-KEY’: President Donald Trump gives his inaugural address after being sworn in as the 45th president of the United States during the 58th Presidenti­al Inaugurati­on on Jan. 20 at the U.S. Capitol in Washington. Big money from billionair­es,...
The Associated Press ‘LOWER-KEY’: President Donald Trump gives his inaugural address after being sworn in as the 45th president of the United States during the 58th Presidenti­al Inaugurati­on on Jan. 20 at the U.S. Capitol in Washington. Big money from billionair­es,...

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