Archive for the ‘Donald Trump’ Category

After Report of Navalny Death, Haley Attacks Trump Over Past Praise for Putin – The New York Times

Many Republicans lined up to condemn President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Friday after Russian authorities reported the death of Aleksei A. Navalny, the outspoken opposition leader.

But Nikki Haley went further, using criticism of Mr. Putin to attack former President Donald J. Trump, her rival in the G.O.P. primary, for his past remarks that praised Mr. Putin.

Putin did this. The same Putin who Donald Trump praises and defends, Ms. Haley, a former governor of South Carolina who served Mr. Trumps ambassador to the United Nations, wrote on the social media platform X on Friday.

She referenced comments that Mr. Trump made in 2015, during his first run for president, when he told ABCs George Stephanopoulos that, In all fairness to Putin, youre saying he killed people. I havent seen that.

Russian authorities announced on Friday that Mr. Navalny, an anticorruption activist who was openly critical of Mr. Putin and was serving multiple sentences that would likely have kept him in prison until 2031, had died in a prison inside the Arctic Circle. President Biden said on Friday afternoon that U.S. officials did not have a full understanding of the situations circumstances, but that he believed there is no doubt that the death of Navalny was a consequence of something that Putin and his thugs did.

Mr. Trump has not yet commented publicly on Mr. Navalnys death, prompting Ms. Haley to also seize on his silence. In another post to X, she wrote that, Putin murdered his political opponent and Trump hasnt said a word after he said he would encourage Putin to invade our allies. He has, however, posted 20+ times on social media about his legal drama and fake polls.

Since reports of Mr. Navalnys death surfaced Friday morning, Mr. Trump delivered posts on Truth Social that criticized Fani T. Willis, the prosecutor in his Georgia election interference case; said that the world had experienced misery, destruction, and death during Mr. Bidens term in office; and promoted his appearance at Sneakercon in Philadelphia on Saturday. But as of Friday afternoon, there was no mention of Mr. Putin or Mr. Navalny.

Ms. Haley has been increasingly critical of Mr. Trumps approach to foreign policy, and specifically his attitude toward Mr. Putin. She told voters at recent stops in South Carolina that Mr. Trump had taken the side of a thug, after the former president said in South Carolina last weekend that he might encourage Russia to attack N.A.T.O. allies delinquent on payments to the military alliance.

Her campaign issued a statement later on Friday that attempted to further connect Mr. Trumps past praise to his recent comments.

Donald Trump continues to side with Vladimir Putin a man who kills his political opponents, holds American journalists hostage, and has never hidden his desire to destroy America, Ms. Haley said. Trump continues to side with Putin over our allies and our military service members.

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After Report of Navalny Death, Haley Attacks Trump Over Past Praise for Putin - The New York Times

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Why Don Jr. and Eric Are in Trouble in the New Trump Rulingand Ivanka Is Not – Slate

The massive fine announced Friday for the civil fraud trial against Donald Trump wasnt just a major financial blow for the former president. Two of his adult children were hit hard, too.

In his ruling, Justice Arthur Engoron, who previously had found that the Trump organization committed fraud by inflating Trumps net worth, decided that Trump and his top associates at the Trump Organization owed an astounding $355 million in damages. On top of that, Trump was banned from serving as an officer or director of any New York corporation or other legal entity in New York for a period of three years.

It was a devastating result for the former president in what was arguably the most personal of his legal challenges. The outcome fell only a little short of the $370 million penalty the prosecution had pushed for.

For the Trump children, this was bad news, too. Both of Trumps adult sons, Eric and Don Jr., who are executive vice presidents of the Trump Organization, wound up owing more than $4 million each in damages. They, like their father, were also banned from doing business in New Yorkthough their ban is for two years, one year less than their father.

One Trump child turned out fine: Ivanka Trump was not a defendant in the case, as she had left the Trump Organization in 2016. But that didnt mean this was a painless situation for her. Like her two other adult siblings who were active in the Trump business (the ever-forgotten Tiffany was blessed to escape getting involved in any of this), Ivanka was still forced to testify, an ordeal that threatened her composed image.

The three Trump children all testified in November. Ivanka Trump, who had the least to fear, took the stand on Nov. 8. She was polite and stuck to her talking points: Though she was an executive vice president of the Trump Organization from 2005 to 2016, she had not had any personal insights into the financial statements. She reiterated her fathers PR claims: The Trump Organization had taken dingy properties and turned them into works of art. She was calm, she smiled often, and she remained quiet on social media.

Donald Trump Jr. took a slightly different tack, going for a strange sort of bro-ish charm inside the courthouse, but acting as an outraged firebrand on the outside. In the courtroom, Don Jr. similarly testified that he had had nothing to do with the records and cracked a few jokes. On social media, he was more aggressive, accusing the prosecutors of being corrupt and having a brazen political mission. Still, he was more astute than his father, choosing not to antagonize the judge in the case (instead only going after New York Attorney General Letitia James).

Eric Trump mimicked his elder brother, to slightly less impressive effect. He similarly shared posts about James. But in his testimony about his personal culpability, he came off more bungling. Like his brother, Eric Trump said he never had anything to do with the financial statements. He then had to change his tune when the prosecution showed him an email in which Eric had clearly indicated he looked at a spreadsheet about them.

Ivanka came out the most unscathed. Even if she never works in politics or the Trump business again, her husband, Jared Kushner, has made a career of working out business deals with oligarchs in the Middle East. But its unclear how the two elder Trump sons will fare while theyre locked out of New Yorks business world for two years. Sure, theyll be involved in their fathers political career, but if he fails to win the 2024 election, that wont carry them. They can, for a while at least, keep going on podcasts. And Don Jr. has his hunting magazine.

Trump Sr. is still facing four criminal trials: charges of falsified business statements over hush payments to Stormy Daniels; charges he mishandled classified records; charges in Georgia over his meddling in the 2020 presidential election there; and federal charges over his efforts to overturn the election. The first trial, over hush money payments, is currently set for March 25.

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Why Don Jr. and Eric Are in Trouble in the New Trump Rulingand Ivanka Is Not - Slate

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Donald Trump Hit With $355M Fraud Trial Judgment; Banned From Doing Business In New York For Years – Deadline

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Donald Trump Hit With $355M Fraud Trial Judgment; Banned From Doing Business In New York For Years - Deadline

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Trump has been ordered to pay $447 million in damages. Can he afford it? – Vox.com

Two recent verdicts have now left Donald Trump on the hook for nearly half a billion dollars.

On Friday, a New York judge handed the former president a $355 million penalty, and banned him from serving in a leadership position in any business in New York for three years, for fraudulently inflating his net worth to lenders in order to receive more favorable loan agreements. And in January, a Manhattan jury ordered Trump to pay the writer E. Jean Carroll $83.3 million for defaming her after she accused him of raping her. (A separate jury in May had found Trump liable for sexually abusing Carroll in the 1990s.)

Together, the damages from these two lawsuits are worth more than the amount of cash Trump claimed to have on hand last April, potentially putting him in a financial bind as he also faces debt repayments and mounting legal fees. Even if he appeals these decisions, as he is expected to do, he still likely will have to front the money while that process runs its course, or secure a bond, which would come with its own conditions.

For a well-connected billionaire, that might usually amount to nothing more than a temporary inconvenience; after all, Trump could always liquidate some of his assets or borrow even more money to cover his short-term obligations.

But Trump isnt just one of the countrys richest men, with an estimated net worth in the low billions; hes also running to serve a second term as president of the United States. And for any candidate for public office let alone the presidency being cash-strapped while owing such significant amounts of money could be a serious liability.

Its pretty scary from an ethics perspective, said Virginia Canter, the chief ethics counsel at the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a nonpartisan watchdog group that has chronicled Trumps abuses of power and filed lawsuits against him.

You dont have to look far to find the reasons why. Trumps first term was riddled with conflicts of interest, and thats in no small part because of his financial well-being (or lack thereof, depending on how you look at it). At the time that he tried to overturn the 2020 election, he was hundreds of millions of dollars in debt, largely stemming from loans to help rehabilitate his struggling businesses, and most of which would be coming due over the subsequent four years. Throughout his presidency, he refused to divest from his businesses, which made millions of dollars in revenue from taxpayers and continued to do work with other countries while he was in office a practice he indicated he would repeat in a second term.

The fact that he has so many entanglements with big businesses and other nations leaves plenty of room for things to go awry. Thats why a 2020 New York Times expos uncovering his staggering debt during his first term wasnt just embarrassing for Trump, who has a tendency to claim hes richer than he actually is. It also raised fears about how his debt could implicate national security.

As the former head of the Justice Departments National Security Division told Time magazine in 2020, For a person with access to U.S. classified information to be in massive financial debt is a counterintelligence risk because the debt-holder tends to have leverage over the person, and the leverage may be used to encourage actions, such as disclosure of information or influencing policy, that compromise U.S. national security.

As Trump campaigns for a second term, his personal finances are becoming increasingly relevant, especially now that he has to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in damages from the two civil lawsuits.

And with his criminal cases still looming, things could get even worse for him. His debt makes him prime for corruption and really exploiting his office for his own personal gain, Canter said.

Trump is known for many things, but a penchant for transparency is not one of them. He famously didnt release his tax returns when he was running for office, and because his company is not publicly traded, its finances are often opaque. As a result, his personal net worth and his business empires earnings have always been shrouded in mystery.

But lawsuits, media reports, and his occasional, if narrow, public disclosures have made clear that Trumps often rosy descriptions of his wealth are far from accurate.

Its particularly unclear just how big his cash reserves are. In a deposition last year, Trump claimed to have $400 million in cash. That is a lot of money, but if its accurate, the former president likely would not have much of it left after paying the damages from his recent lawsuits. (While he can, in some cases, dip into campaign cash to cover certain legal expenses, he generally cant use those funds to pay the damages he owes.)

Lawsuits aside, Trump also has plenty of debt on his hands. His financial disclosures filed with the Federal Election Commission last year showed that he has at least $200 million in debt. And according to Forbes, his business owed roughly $1.3 billion in 2021.

Thats not as dire as it sounds, especially because Trump has been steadily paying down the money he owed when he was leaving the White House three years ago. For example, hes paid off most of the $295 million he owed Deutsche Bank a major source of his debt. But some of Trumps debts warrant more scrutiny.

Ultimately, its impossible to know exactly how financially stable Trump is at any given moment. While some signs like his ability to repay some of his debts or, say, him being a very wealthy man with very wealthy friends indicate that hes doing just fine, there are still some warning signs for his campaign. Trump has faced a steady stream of hefty legal bills that stem from his four indictments, and that has drained much of his campaign cash. In fact, Trumps campaign has spent more than $50 million on legal fees in the past year alone. According to the Associated Press, 84 percent of spending from Trumps Save America political action committee has gone toward covering legal expenses.

Those arent exactly the typical spending habits of a normal campaign. But then again, Trump isnt a normal candidate.

One of the most explosive details in the New York Timess 2020 report on Trumps leaked tax returns is that despite being incredibly rich, there were years that he paid little to no federal income tax. In 2016, when he first won the presidency, he had paid a grand total of $750 in federal income taxes. That could help explain why Trump refused to release his tax returns in the first place, though doing so has been the norm for presidential candidates since the 1970s.

As serious as it is that Trump (and other wealthy Americans) can pay virtually no federal income taxes, there are even bigger consequences to his lack of transparency. Trumps web of business deals also provides ample opportunity for special interests and foreign governments to attempt to buy influence in his administration. Foreign governments, for example, spent millions of dollars at Trumps businesses during his presidency. A Chinese state-owned bank paid $7 million to rent space in Trump Tower in New York during the four years Trump was president. The company stopped renting out space when Trump left office.

To believe that the potential for that kind of revenue could not influence Trumps agenda, or even travel itinerary, would require an extraordinary level of trust in the former president something most voters dont have.

After all, how could a president fairly pursue a trade deal, for example, with a country hes doing personal business with? Its that kind of behavior that led to accusations that Trump violated the emoluments clauses of the US Constitution, which bar presidents from receiving money from foreign governments, as well as US states or the federal government outside their salary, in order to avoid undue influence.

During his presidential term, Trump also had many hidden debts, and while a lot of his creditors were big financial institutions, some were unknown. According to Forbes, for example, Trump had a previously undisclosed loan from a foreign creditor when he became president, owing nearly $20 million to a South Korean company. While Trump paid off that loan within the first six months he was in office, its just one example of how his potential conflicts of interest are tricky to keep track of.

In the runup to 2016, Trump misleadingly touted his wealth as a key advantage that furthered the public interest. He promised to self-fund his campaign, saying that he wouldnt be beholden to anybody, but he failed to keep that pledge.

But the problem for Trump isnt just his inability to self-fund his White House bids. The fact that he is constantly on the lookout for new loans or sources of income gives special interests a vehicle to curry favor with him. After his former lenders cut ties with him in the aftermath of the January 6 insurrection, for example, Axos Bank, whose CEO is a Republican donor, swooped in and loaned the former president some $225 million, helping Trump shore up his finances. (Trump has also reported new income from foreign entities, like a new deal he struck with a Saudi-based firm.)

While Trumps lack of transparency might have served him well until now, shielding him from potential legal and political liabilities, it also could have far-reaching consequences should he win a second term this November.

A lot of people thought Bernie Madoff was rich, Canter said. There are a lot of characters who portray themselves as rich, but when you look into the cookie jar, theres nothing there.

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Trump has been ordered to pay $447 million in damages. Can he afford it? - Vox.com

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For Trump, Friday’s verdict is not just business. It’s personal. – POLITICO

The judge also imposed a three year ban on Trump serving any roles in his New York-based company, and put similar two-year bans on his sons, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., both senior executives in the Trump Organization, from running the company and fined them each $4 million.

But the harm from that verdict cannot be measured solely in dollar signs and business transactions.

For decades, Trump has cast himself as a successful businessperson, even as he sometimes struggled to keep his company afloat. From his NBC show, The Apprentice, to his series of books on getting rich, cutting deals and thinking like a billionaire, Trump marketed himself as the savviest of tycoons to the American masses.

Trump is worth billions, according to estimates from Forbes and Bloomberg, with much of his wealth wrapped up in his New York City real estate portfolio, hotels, golf resorts and clubs. While theres been endless speculation about the validity of those estimates, experts still believe he will be able to afford the damages and fines, although has pledged to appeal it and is likely to delay any payment until he has exhausted all legal options.

But the verdict itself is a reputational hit, denting the perception that the Trump Organization is anything but a shining success. And it matters on a personal level to Trump, too. Not only does he see this as part of a witch hunt that wants to destroy his political future, but he also is invested in handing off a solid company to his children, who now run it.

He views these judgments as a kind of existential threat to his entire brand, said Tim OBrien, a Trump biographer turned critic. It will wear at him psychologically.

A Trump ally declined to engage in the psychological effect the verdict might have on him. While they have no doubts Trump who has worn his aggravation about the case on his sleeve during court appearances will be angry about the outcome, the person described it as obviously political and unlikely to shift public opinion.

I dont think this will have any effect on anything moving forward. It will just reinforce the feelings of those who already hate him, and for the people who love him it will reinforce that the system is corrupt and out to get him, the person said, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, and only addressed the political impact the ruling would have.

The last time Trump found himself facing serious financial losses was in the early 1990s, when his entire real estate empire was at risk of falling apart under over $3 billion in debt.

It was the most devastating experience of his life. He was going through divorces, everything was falling around him. He became sullen, combative, pouty and I think it was not an era hes ever wanted to revisit, though circumstances creep up on him again because hes a debt monster and cant help himself, OBrien said, Judgments like this are scary because they bring back echoes of the early 1990s.

But Trump, ever the marketer, turned those early 90s setbacks around, recasting himself as a television personality and reestablishing his brand as a business savant.

He then branched out further, entering politics. And, as a politician, he used those marketing skills to turn the legal judgments against him into campaign rallying cries. Trump has claimed that the justice system is rigged and his supporters have, largely, been convinced.

Hes frustrated for being a target, and hes frustrated for what it means. This is an escalation weve never gone through in this country, where we weaponize the courts to go to an extreme after somebody, said Bryan Lanza, who worked on Trumps 2016 campaign and remains close to his current team.

Even though Trump sees a spike in polling and fundraising after major legal moments, his advisers do not view any of these court cases as entirely helpful. They pull Trump off the campaign trail and distract from their political message.

But, increasingly, Trumps legal problems and campaign have become one and the same. And as the former president emerged from Fridays verdict, it was clear that there were personal elements intertwined too.

I helped New York City during its worst of times, read part of Trumps statement, and now, while it is overrun with Violent Biden Migrant Crime, the Radicals are doing all they can to kick me out.

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For Trump, Friday's verdict is not just business. It's personal. - POLITICO

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