Archive for the ‘Donald Trump’ Category

Donald Trump’s Threat to Press Freedom: Why It Matters

Less than a month before the U.S. presidential election, the Committee to Protect Journalists issued an unprecedented statement denouncing the then-Republican nominee. [Donald] Trump has insulted and vilified the press and has made his opposition to the media a centerpiece of his campaign, said the committee, a New York-based organization that promotes press freedom. A Trump presidency would represent a threat to press freedom in the United States.

With little more than two months before Trump takes the oath of office, the threat to the mediaand the publics right to knowis reality. However, President-elect Trump may find a thicket of laws and Supreme Court precedents limit his maneuveringslight comfort for those working to protect a free press.

Supporters of Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump scream and gesture at members of the media in a press area at a campaign rally in Cincinnati, Ohio, October 13. Mike Segar/Reuters

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At the president-elects often incendiary rallies, Trump frequently blasted the press as dishonest, disgusting and scum. The crowds that gathered to watch him would often turn and jeer at the reporters, hemmed in the press pen.

On the internet, the vitriol from Trump fans continued. In April, the journalist Julia Ioffe received a barrage of anti-Semitic abuse and death threats after she wrote a critical profile of Trumps wife Melania for GQ magazine. In October, a Trump supporter sent Newsweek s Kurt Eichenwald ( who has been vocal about his epilepsy) a video that triggers seizures. Other Newsweek staffers have received anti-Semitic slurs on Twitter and memes about hanging journalists from trees.

Even the few news outlets who backed Trump werent always safe. In March, Florida police charged Trumps then-campaign manager Corey Lewandowski with battery after he appeared to grab Breitbart reporter Michelle Fields as she approached Trump to ask him a question. (Florida ultimately decided not to prosecute Lewandowski, and he landed a job at CNN.)

Amid the threats and abuse, Trumpwho once gave interviews to any outlet that would pay him attentionstarted turning on the press. At a Texas rally in February, Trump made a promise. If elected president, he said, I'm going to open up our libel laws so when [journalists] write purposely negative and horrible and false articles, we can sue them and win lots of money.

Could he do this? Probably not, says Craig Aaron, the president of the U.S. advocacy group Free Press. Aaron points out that the U.S.s free speech protections through law and Supreme Court precedent make it difficult for a public figure to sue the press and win. And as hell learnif he hasnt alreadytheres no more public figure than a president, Aaron says. Though I suppose in theory he could badger journalists with frivolous lawsuits.

But whether Trumps threat was realistic, it had a chilling effect on news organizations. His rise was the most distressing campaign in memory, from the perspective of press freedom, says Suzanne Nossel, the executive director of PEN American Center, which advocates for free expression. In short, there has probably never been a presidential candidate so openly and publicly hostile to the press.

Now that hes won, there's definitely reason for concern, Nossel says. If the campaign and his past history are any indication, this will be a president who is dismissive of the role of the press. Accusatory. Punitive in his treatment of journalists. Arbitrary. Secretive when he wants to be.

Throughout the campaign, Trump denied press credentials to a range of news organizations, from BuzzFeed to Politico to the Washington Post . At the time, Post editor Marty Baron described Trumps ban as a repudiation of the role of a free and independent press. (Perhaps keen to get back in Trumps good graces, the Post s owner, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, recently tweeted : Congratulations to @realDonaldTrump. I for one give him my most open mind and wish him great success in his service to the country.)

Trump, of course, has not yet assumed the powers of the presidency. But his refusal to allow a press pool to accompany him to his meeting with President Barack Obama on Thursday suggested that his hostility toward reporters has not waned. In newsrooms all over the country, journalists are now wondering: What happens to a free press under President Trump?

First, the good news. The U.S. Constitution, and a succession of Supreme Court rulings, will ensure that the press is somewhat shielded against the caprices of a man who has openly mused about suing news outlets who report critically on him.

The First Amendment guarantees that Congress can make no law that abridges the freedom of the press, writes Andrea Hatcher, associate professor and chair of the department of politics at the University of the South, in an email to Newsweek. A free press is part of the American identity. And textual Constitutional guarantees have always been rather sacred.

In recent decades, the Supreme Court has consistently ruled to protect the presss freedom. Camila Vergara, a PhD candidate in political science at Columbia University and an adjunct lecturer in political theory at New York University, outlined three landmark decisions to Newsweek that she said would keep news outlets free to criticize Trump.

The first ruling came in 1931, in Near v. Minnesota , when the Supreme Court found that a state law allowing prior restraint of the pressessentially, censorship in advancewas unconstitutional.

The secondwhich could stymie Trumps February promise to sue journalists and win lots of moneywas in 1964 with New York Times v. Sullivan, which established the actual malice standard. The court unanimously decided that for a public figure to win a libel suit against the media, he or she had to prove the outlet acted with actual maliceessentially, that the report was known to be inaccurate or that it was published with reckless disregard for its veracity.

Finally, the third decision, again involving the New York Times , saw the court rule in 1971 that the U.S. government (the other plaintiff) could not stop the Times and the Washington Post from publishing the then-classified Pentagon Papers, documents which detailed the nations involvement in Vietnam. The ruling, Vergara says, puts the burden of proof on the government, to prove that publication of sensitive information would undermine national security.

In other words, the Supreme Court has had the presss back. The trouble is that theres a vacancy on the court, created by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia in February. Two of the sitting judges, Anthony Kennedy and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, are over 80 years old. Should they die or retire, Trump will have the chance to appoint two more justices to the bench. (In September, sources claimed that Trump wanted to nominate the Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel a man who is also notorious for bankrolling the lawsuit that sued Gawker out of existenceto the court. Spokespeople for both Trump and Thiel denied the reports.)

What now is frighteningfor a free press and other freedoms we hold dearis that the president is positioned to create a court that can interpret the Constitution in ways that undermine our libertyeven those that we thought to be inviolable, writes Hatcher. Unified ideological control of the three branches of government, plus many of the state governments, means that institutional checks and balances are more vulnerable than they have ever been.

A supporter of Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump screams at members of the media working in a press area at a Trump campaign rally in West Palm Beach, Florida, October 13. Reuters

Even if the Supreme Court continues to protect the First Amendment, and with it the U.S. press, there are other ways that Trump could limit journalistic freedoms. The pattern is intimidation and threats. In September, for instance, he threatened a lawsuit against the New York Times .

The following month, when the Times published an article about the women accusing Trump of assault, the candidate claimed he was going to sue the newspaper and the women who went on the record.

He never pursued these lawsuits. The discovery process would have been too damaging, as commentators noted, and he would not have had much of a case: The Times story was a piece of newsworthy reporting on someone who is obviously a public figure. So the newspaper refused to back down. We welcome the opportunity to have a court set him straight, the Times lawyer wrote in a letter to Trump's counsel.

But Trumps intimidation was enough to get his point across. Other news outlets lack the resources that the Times has to defend itself against a potential libel suit (a more vulnerable newspaper with lesser resources might have backed down). Plus, the election outcome has taught him that going to war with the press works, so why would he change now? says Aaron. I suspect Trump will use the power of his office in the more predictable but no less problematic ways weve glimpsed on the campaign trail: intimidating journalists, turning his bully-pulpit power against them and trying to delegitimize the role of an adversarial press at every opportunity. He also predicts Trump will expand the Obama administrations war on whistleblowers.

Nossel is worried but cautiously optimistic.

He doesn't seem to understand or respect the principles of press freedom that is so important in this country, she says. Maybe that'll change. There's a certain solemnity of responsibility that's maybe setting in for him now. Regardless, her organization will be watching. I would be surprised if we don't have a busy time ahead of us, Nossel says.

To some people, these concerns might seem trivial. Across the U.S., marginalized groups more vulnerable than journalists are terrified for their futurewith some ethnic minorities already falling victim to abuse. But a free press is one of several entities that gives voice to the voiceless. If a Trump administration restricts and limits it, the effects will reverberate far beyond the news organizations.

So whats the plan? How can journalists prepare themselves for the age of Trump?

Aaron offers some advice. Don't normalize; scrutinize, he says. Don't be a stenographer. Stay away from the press conferences and golf courses and dig into the documents, appointments and policies including policies that will shape journalism, the internet and the media business.

What else? Stand up for those asking President Trump hard questions. Show solidarity with everyone committing acts of journalism even if they don't have fancy credentials. Get a good lawyer on speed dial. And encrypt everything.

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Donald Trump's Threat to Press Freedom: Why It Matters

Donald Trump Beats Libel Lawsuit Over Tweets Directed at …

Donald Trump says he wants to "open up" libel laws, but a few days before he becomesthe next President of the United States, he became fortunate that such laws place high burdens on plaintiffs. A New York Supreme Court judge on Tuesday agreed to dismiss a defamation suit brought byCheryl Jacobus, a political strategist who, Trump tweeted, had "begged" him for a job and went "hostile" when she was turned down.

Jacobus sued Trump and his former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski over comments made in the midst of a heated Republican primary. Seeking $4 million in damages, shealleged in her complaint that the Trump campaign tried to recruit her in May 2015, even attempting to entice her with the prospect of a post-campaign job at Fox News. She says Lewandowski told her that Trump was very close to Roger Ailes.She further claimed of coming to the judgment that working for Trump was untenable because Lewandowski was a "powder keg."

In January 2016, she appeared on CNN to discuss Trump's decision to skip a primary debate on Fox News and opined that Trump was "using the Megyn Kelly manufactured kerfuffle as an excuse." A few days later, she returned to Don Lemon's show and was dubious about Trump's claims of self-funding his campaign.

This may have set Trump off. In one tweet, he wrote how he"turned her down twice and she went hostile. Major loser, zero credibility."

In response to the defamation lawsuit, Trump moved to dismiss on the basis that the statements were "pure opinion," not susceptible to any defamatory meaning because they couldn't be proved true or . His attorney also pointed the judge's attention to the hyperbolic nature of Twitter, and wrote that when plaintiffs likeJacobus have access to the media, they face higher burdens because of their opportunity to rebut points.

This led to a noteworthy hearing in October where the judge heard Trump's attorney, Lawrence Rosen, say that "perception is reality" and the plaintiff's attorney, Jay Butterman, nod to Nazi Germany with a warning thatthe rights of individuals could be trampled upon just for voicing some criticism of someone in power.

Today, New York judge Barbara Jaffereleased her decision grantingTrump's motion to dismiss.

"Trump's characterization of plaintiff as having 'begged' for a job is reasonably viewed as a loose, figurative, and hyperbolic reference to plaintiff's state of mind and is therefore, not susceptible of objective verification," writes Jaffe. "To the extent that the word 'begged' can be proven to be arepresentation of plaintiff's interest in the position, the defensive tone of the tweet, having followed plaintiff's negative commentary about Trump, signals to readers that plaintiff and Trump were engaged in a petty quarrel."

The judge explores the context of the tweets and how Trump has used the medium. She notes "Trump's regular use of Twitter to circulate his positions and skewer his opponents and others who criticize him, including journalists and media organizations whose coverage he finds objectionable."

"His tweets about his critics, necessarily restricted to 140 characters or less, are rife with vague and simplistic insults such as 'loser' or 'total loser' or 'totally biased loser,' 'dummy' or 'dope' or 'dumb,' 'zero/no credibility,' 'crazy' or 'wacko' and 'disaster,' all deflecting serious consideration," she continues.

"And yet," the judge adds, "the context of a national presidential primary and a candidate's strategic and almost exclusive use of Twitter to advance his views arguably distinguish this case from those where heated rhetoric, with or without the use of social media, was held to constitute communications that cannot be taken seriously.... These circumstances raise some concern that some may avoid liability by conveying positions in small Twitter parcels, as opposed to by doing so in a more formal and presumably actionable manner...."

The judge then writes that nevertheless, and "with the spirit of the First Amendment," she finds a reasonable reader would recognize Trump's schoolyard type squabble as rendering statements of "opinion, even if some of the statements, viewed in isolation, could be found to convey facts."

The judge concludes, "Thus, although the intemperate tweets are clearly intended to belittle and demean plaintiff, any reasonable reading of them makes it 'impossible to conclude that [what defendants said or implied]...could subject...[plaintiff] to contempt or aversion, induce any unsavory opinion of [her] or reflect adversely upon [her] work,' or otherwise damage her reputation as a partisan political consultant and commentator.... Indeed, to some, truth itself has been lost in the cacophony of online and Twitter verbiage to such a degree that it seems to roll of the national consciousness like water off a duck's back."

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Donald Trump Beats Libel Lawsuit Over Tweets Directed at ...

Ten Questions for Donald Trump – NBC News

First Read is a morning briefing from Meet the Press and the NBC Political Unit on the day's most important political stories and why they matter.

Here are 10 questions for Trump

Today is set to be the busiest day in American politics since last November's presidential election -- with three Senate confirmation hearings and President-elect Donald Trump's news conference. It's also one of the most uncertain moments we can remember in politics -- with last night's revelations about Trump and Russia. But we start with that newser, which is Trump's first formal one since July 27, 2016 (when he said, "Russia, if you're listening, I hope you're able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing"). Here are 10 questions that we'd ask Trump:

RUSSIA

1. After the intelligence briefing you received on Friday, you and your team released statements, fired off tweets, and conducted interviews -- but never once condemned Russia's interference in the 2016 election. Why give Russia and Vladimir Putin a pass? And why more outrage directed at the victim (the DNC, John Podesta) than the perpetrator (Russia).

2. In the year and a half that you've either been running for office or been president-elect, you've criticized numerous Republicans, Democrats, and members of the media. But you've never once criticized Putin. Why not?

3. You've said that Russia's interference didn't impact the result of the election. But you eagerly cited WikiLeaks revelations against Hillary Clinton and her team in the final weeks of the campaign, saying things like, "Boy, I love reading those WikiLeaks" and "This WikiLeaks is like a treasure trove." If they didn't impact the election, why were you citing them on the campaign trail?

TRUMP'S BUSINESS/CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

4. How can you ensure Americans that you're not violating the Constitution's Emoluments Clause, which states that no person holding federal office can receive a fee or profit from a foreign government or entity -- especially when foreign governments are already booking rooms and space in the DC hotel you and your family own?

HEALTH CARE

5. Do you side with Republican lawmakers who believe that any effort to repeal President Obama's health-care law must immediately have replacement language in place? Or do you side with those who believe that you can delay or postpone the replacement?

ON WALL STREET

6. On the campaign trail, you railed against Hillary Clinton for her ties to Wall Street and Goldman Sachs. But your pick to head the Treasury Department worked at Goldman. So did your White House strategist, Steve Bannon. Gary Cohn, the president of Goldman Sachs, is set to be your top economic-policy adviser. Why shouldn't Americans, especially those who hail from working-class America, believe your administration is in the pocket of Wall Street?

CABINET

7. You lost the popular vote by nearly 3 million votes, and your Electoral College victory was one of the narrowest in U.S. history. Given that, why haven't you put a Democratic politician in your cabinet to help unify the country? Also, your cabinet has less diversity than Bill Clinton's in 1993, George W. Bush's in 2001, and Barack Obama's in 2009. Why not have a cabinet that looks more like America?

MUSLIM BAN

8. Once and for all, do you support a ban against Muslims entering the United States to combat terrorism? And if so, how would you administer that?

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

9. Do you support efforts to repeal funding for Planned Parenthood?

APOLOGY TO OBAMA?

10. Since winning the election, you have had kinder words for President Obama. Given that, do you once and for all apologize for being one of the leading voices in the effort doubting that he was born in the United States?

These now go to 11

We have one more question for Trump: Of course, there's one more question to ask after last night's news about Trump and Russia: Isn't it in your best interest to have a full investigation to get to the bottom of whatever Russia may or may not have about you? NBC's Ken Dilanian: "Two U.S. officials with direct knowledge told NBC News on Tuesday that briefing materials prepared for President-elect Donald Trump included information that initially circulated among Trump opponents and was passed to U.S. intelligence agencies making damaging allegations about his dealings with Russians. Neither of the officials said the FBI was actively investigating the information, which has not been verified by U.S. agencies. The sources would not comment on the nature of the allegations. The Trump transition team did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But Trump himself did tweet at 8:19 p.m. ET Tuesday, in all caps, 'FAKE NEWS A TOTAL POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!'" And this morning, Trump issued four more tweets. One: "Russia just said the unverified report paid for by political opponents is 'A COMPLETE AND TOTAL FABRICATION, UTTER NONSENSE.' Very unfair!" Two: "Russia has never tried to use leverage over me. I HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH RUSSIA - NO DEALS, NO LOANS, NO NOTHING!" (But that raises another question: Why not release your taxes to prove you have no deal or business with Russia or Russian interests? ) Three: "I win an election easily, a great "movement" is verified, and crooked opponents try to belittle our victory with FAKE NEWS. A sorry state!" And four: "Intelligence agencies should never have allowed this fake news to "leak" into the public. One last shot at me.Are we living in Nazi Germany?"

Obama: "Our democracy is threatened whenever we take it for granted"

Folks, with nine days before Trump takes office on January 20, we are in what has to be the most uncertain moment in American politics. And that sets up our take on Obama's farewell speech from last night. A part of it was a laundry list of his accomplishments ("If I had told you eight years ago that America would reverse a great recession, reboot our auto industry, and unleash the longest stretch of job creation in our history"). A part of it was his effort to buck up Democrats after November's loss ("For every two steps forward, it often feels we take one step back. But the long sweep of America has been defined by forward motion"). But the biggest part was his argument that the state of American democracy right now isn't so strong. "Our democracy is threatened whenever we take it for granted," he said. "All of us, regardless of party, should be throwing ourselves into the task of rebuilding our democratic institutions." Think about that: The outgoing president of the United States is so concerned about the state of the country's democracy that he had to defend it. If Obama's farewell speech becomes memorable (outside of his touching comments about his wife, daughters, and Joe Biden), it is only bad news.

Today's three confirmation hearings

So there's Trump's news conference. There was last night's Obama speech. And then there's the three Senate confirmation hearings on Trump's cabinet picks -- Jeff Sessions for attorney general (Day 2), Rex Tillerson for secretary of state, and Elaine Chao for Transportation secretary. The full hearing schedule, per NBC's Frank Thorp:

Tillerson's opening statement

"Russia must be held to account for its actions." So why hasn't Trump said that? In his opening statement, per NBC's Peter Alexander, Tillerson will say that Russia "must be held to account for his actions." He will say, "Where cooperation with Russia based on common interests is possible, such as reducing the global threat of terrorism, we ought to explore these options. Where important differences remain, we should be steadfast in defending the interests of America and her allies. Russia must know that we will be accountable to our commitments and those of our allies, and that Russia must be held to account for its actions." Our question: Why hasn't Trump said that, especially after Friday's intel briefing?

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Ten Questions for Donald Trump - NBC News

Donald Trumps Plan to Keep His Business Is a National …

From left to right: Eric, Ivanka, and Donald Trump Jr. with Mike Pence and Donald Trump at this morning's press conference.

By Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images.

Flanked by a dozen American flags and gripping a lectern, Donald Trump began his first press conference in 168 days, one meant to address the myriad conflicts of interest that he could face as president, by bragging about how he had recently turned down an opportunity to make billions of dollars in the Middle East. Over the weekend, I was offered $2 billion to do a deal in Dubai with a very, very amazing guy, the president-elect told reporters, who had assembled at Trump Tower to hear how the president-elect plans to resolve his sprawling financial interests in the Trump Organization, and to ask him questions after he unexpectedly cancelled a previous press conference on the subject last month.

President-elect Trump should not be expected to destroy the company he built.

What they received instead, however, was a largely defensive and digressive explanation of Trumps profound disinterest in the topic. Trump discussed the pharmaceutical industry and the auto business, but he mainly focused on various obfuscations. Two-billion dollars to do a number of deals, he continued. I turned it down. I didnt have to turn it down. . . . I have no conflict-of-interest provision as president. I could actually run my business and run government at the same time. I can run the Trump Organizationa great, great companyand run the country. Id do a great job.

That is not, in fact, what Trump plans to do. His solution, instead, involves handing the management of his business over to his two adult sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, who were standing to his right onstage, along with their sister Ivanka, who will step down from the Trump Organization to move her family to Washington. Her husband, Jared Kushner, will serve in the West Wing as senior adviser to the president, flouting federal anti-nepotism laws that Kushners lawyers argue do not apply to the White House.

Trump himself will not divest his financial interest in his company, claiming that he will pay it no mind as president. [My two sons] are going to be running it in a very professional manner. They are not going to discuss it with me, he said. Later in the presser, he said that when his time in office is over, he hopes to discover that his sons did a good job. And if they dont, he will give them his signature reality-television line: Youre fired. He pointed to a stack of manila folders set up on a table just to his sidesix sloppily arranged files and papers that allegedly contained hundreds of documents he had signed in order to turn over control of his company and avoid the appearance of conflicts of interest.

After only about 20 minutes behind the microphone and only several questions from the press, Trump brought up Sheri Dillon, a tax attorney who has helped the president-elect determine how to comply with ethics standards, to read a statement. He directed me to design a structure for his business empire that would completely isolate him from the management of the company, said Dillon, who also helped build protections that would assure the American people that Trump is not exploiting the office of the presidency.

That structure includes Trump stepping away from all management roles within the Trump Organization. Dillon stated that the Trump Organization will not make any foreign deals for the duration of his administration, but his sons will be able to make deals domestically. An appointed ethics adviser, who was not named, will be required to sign off on all new deals that his sons choose to make before they go forward. She also stated that Trump has canceled all pending dealsabout 30 or soand gotten rid of his stock holdings. In addition, she explained that Trump will not talk to his sons about the business, and the only information he will receive on the health of the business will be generalized reports on profits and losses and what he reads in newspapers and sees on television. The Trump Organizations social-media accounts will also be completely separate from Trump himself and the office of the president.

Trump will still hold on to illiquid business assets, including his golf clubs, resorts, hotels, and deals that bear his name, presumably including Trump Water, Trump wine, and Trump Tower. President-elect Trump should not be expected to destroy the company he built, Dillon said. As for the possibility of setting up a blind trusta suggestion ethics experts have hailed as critical for removing the appearance of conflictsshe said that is not feasible. President Trump cant un-know that he own Trump Tower.

As for the Emoluments Clause, a portion of the U.S. Constitution that prohibits a president from accepting gifts, presents, and financial backing from foreign governments or entities, Trumps lawyer argued that it has never been interpreted to apply to fair-value exchanges. In her reading of the law, this means that foreign-government officials staying at a Trump-owned hotel in order to curry the favor of the president or his children would not violate the Constitution because paying your hotel bill would be . . . a value-to-value exchange. Still, she said, Trump will donate foreign-government payments made to his hotels to the U.S. Treasury so that the American people will benefit.

The plan, as is, does little to substantively tame the ethical violations that could set fire to the office of the presidency once Trump takes office. He still stands to financially benefit from his businesses. His sons and daughter will also still stand to benefit. To suggest that his children, whose opinions he valued enough to place on his White House transition team, will not discuss his business with him at all is tenuous at best, and also requires the American people to take the family at their word that, in private, they will not discuss the family business. As for the ethics adviser, it is unclear who this individual would be, what their qualifications are, and how the public will know that this person remains independent.

While the Trump Organization will not be making foreign deals under the new structure outlined Wednesday, the domestic deals it will continue to pursue remain problematic. It is not hard to see how developers could make deals with the Trump family in order to gain access, court, or get in the good graces of the president. The incentive to patronize and conduct favorable dealings with Trump properties will remain as strong and, on its face, as ethically problematic as ever.

If anything, it appears that Trumps plan to have his businesses donate their profits from representatives of foreign governments to the U.S. Treasury makes the Emoluments issue more complicated and troublesome. This interpretation of the law is a narrow one, certainly. And because one Trump lawyer reads it as such does not mean that the rest of the U.S. government and courts will interpret it the same way. (Dillon did not say whether the plan had been presented to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, or whether the agency had given its approval.)

The plan does little to address most of the more worrying conflicts of interest that threaten to undermine the incoming Trump administration. It remains unclear how Trump will handle the lease for his newly built Trump Hotel in Washington, D.C., which is leased from the Government Services Administration. The lease states that it cant be held by an elected official. But this decision is to be determined by the head of the G.S.A., an individual whom Trump will appoint once in office. Other Trump appointees, too, will be asked to make critical decisions affecting Trump businesses. The attorney general put forth by Trump will be in charge of investigations into Deutsche Bank, an institution to which Trump is $300 million in debt. The head of the I.R.S., also a Trump appointee, will be in charge of an ongoing audit into his tax returns, which he has still not released.

The tax returns, Trump said in the press conference on Wednesday, dont matter to the American public. I dont think they care, he said. I won. I became president. As of now, it hasnt yet mattered to the American electorateat least the 46.1 percent who voted for himnor have his supporters called on him to account for the web of opaque business ties that will continue to line his pockets in office. If it did, perhaps he would have actually taken steps to address them.

Is this an endearing moment of Donald squeezing Erics cheeks, or Donald checking to see if his thoroughbred sons teeth are healthy?

Tiffany, Donald, and Donald junior at Donalds 50th birthday party.

Young Eric attends the U.S. Open in 1991, making one of the few public appearances without shellacked hair.

A 10-year-old Eric is not as camera-ready as his mother Ivana. Hell get there one day.

Don Jr., 38, and Barron, 10, share an inter-generational fist-bump at the Republican National Convention.

Eric and Don Jr., for once not wearing slicked-back hair, pay their respects to their dear father.

Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. at the Old Post Office, now a Trump hotel, Washington, D.C., July 2014.

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Is this an endearing moment of Donald squeezing Erics cheeks, or Donald checking to see if his thoroughbred sons teeth are healthy?

by Ron Galella/WireImage.

Tiffany, Donald, and Donald junior at Donalds 50th birthday party.

BY RON GALELLA/WIREIMAGE.

Young Eric attends the U.S. Open in 1991, making one of the few public appearances without shellacked hair.

by Ron Galella/WireImage.

A 10-year-old Eric is not as camera-ready as his mother Ivana. Hell get there one day.

by Ron Galella/WireImage.

As Ivanka practices looking gorgeous at her fathers 50th birthday, a 12-year-old Eric appears displeased at his choice of tie.

by Richard Corkery/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images.

Eric and Donald at a basketball game in East Rutherford, New Jersey, in 2007.

BY JAMES DEVANEY/WIREIMAGE.

Don junior in Briarcliff Manor, New York, 2014.

BY BOBBY BANK/WIREIMAGE.

A 23-year-old Eric attempts to smile. Hell get there one day.

by M. Von Holden/WireImage.

Donald disapproved of Don Jr. proposing to model Vanessa Haydon using an engagement ring provided by a New Jersey jeweler who wanted publicity. You have a name thats hot as a pistol, said Trump, a man who put said name on everything from steaks to playing cards.

by Dave Allocca/StarPix/REX/Shutterstock.

It is unknown whether Eric Trump eventually killed this animal for sport.

by Paul Zimmerman/Getty Images.

Don Jr., and baby Barron at the unveiling of their fathers star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Barron is either throwing his fists in the air in celebration of his fathers accomplishments, or is waving for help.

by Hubert Boesl/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images.

We presume that this is Don Jr. impersonating his sister Ivanka at the Eric Trump Golf Tournament in 2014.

by Bobby Bank/WireImage.

A 9-year-old Barron already has his fathers eyes and princely smirk.

by Debra L Rothenberg/FilmMagic.

At a campaign event in Las Vegas, December 2015.

FROM VISIONS OF AMERICA/UIG/GETTY IMAGES.

Don Jr., 38, and Barron, 10, share an inter-generational fist-bump at the Republican National Convention.

By Carlo Allegri/REUTERS.

Eric and Don Jr., for once not wearing slicked-back hair, pay their respects to their dear father.

by Mark Wilson/Getty Images.

Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. at the Old Post Office, now a Trump hotel, Washington, D.C., July 2014.

BY PAUL MORIGI/WIREIMAGE.

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Donald Trumps Plan to Keep His Business Is a National ...

Donald Trump ‘hired group of prostitutes to defile Moscow …

Donald Trump arranged for a group of prostitutes to urinate on the Moscow hotel bed where the Obamas had slept, according to sensational reports in the US.

The President-elect engaged in 'perverted conduct' because he 'hates' Barack and Michelle Obama, it is claimed.

The lurid detail is contained in a dossier allegedly written by a retired British MI6 spy for Trump's political opponents.

None of the claims have been independently verified.

In response to the reports, Donald Trump tweeted: "FAKE NEWS - A TOTAL POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!"

The memo, published in full by Buzzfeed, claims: "According to Source D, where s/he had been present, Trumps (perverted) conduct in Moscow included hiring the Presidential suite of the Ritz Carlton Hotel, where he knew President and Mrs Obama (whom he hated) had stayed on one of their official trips to Russia, and defiling the bed where they had slept by employing a number of prostitutes to perform a [redacted] show in front of him.

The FSB - Russia's spy agency - had the hotel room bugged at the time with "microphones and concealed cameras", it is claimed.

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The report goes on: "Speaking separately in June 2016, Source B (the former top level Russian intelligence officer) asserted that Trumps unorthodox behaviour in Russia over the years had provided the authorities there with enough embarrassing material on the now Republican presidential candidate to be able to blackmail him if they so wished."

Another allegation says that Trump had participated in sex parties in St Petersburg, but that witnesses were bribed or coerced to disappear.

It is also claimed that Russia tried to further compromise Donald Trump through "lucrative" business deals, including ones involving the 2018 World Cup.

The report claims: "The Kremlin's cultivation operation on Trump also had a compromised offering him various lucrative real estate development business deals in Russia, especially in relation to the ongoing 2018 World Cup soccer tournament.

"However so far, for reasons unknown, Trump had not taken up any of these."

Possession of compromising information about Trump has led to Russian intelligence agencies "cultivating, supporting and assisting" the Republican for five years, the report claims.

The billionaire businessman is understood to have found out about the claims during a during a meeting with intelligence chiefs, who last week presented him with evidence of Russian interference in the 2016 election.

A two-page synopsis of the dossier has been submitted to Trump and President Obama, it is believed.

The FBI is now said to be probing the credibility and accuracy of the allegations.

One high level administration official told CNN: I have a sense the outgoing administration and intelligence community is setting down the pieces so this must be investigated seriously and run down.

"I think [the] concern was to be sure that whatever information was out there is put into the system so it is evaluated as it should be and acted upon as necessary.

The classified briefings were presented by four of the senior-most US intelligence chiefs -- Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, FBI Director James Comey, CIA Director John Brennan, and NSA Director Admiral Mike Rogers.

Sources claim intelligence chiefs took the extraordinary step of including the synopsis in the briefing documents to make Trump aware allegations involving him are circulating in Washington.

It is understood they also wanted to demonstrate how Russia had potentially harmful information on both political parties, but only released information damaging to Hillary Clinton and Democrats.

CNN has reviewed a 35-page compilation of the memos, from which the two-page synopsis was drawn, but said it is not reporting their details as it has not independently corroborated the specific allegations.

It is claimed some of the memos were circulating last summer but US intelligence agencies have now checked out the former British intelligence operative and find him and his sources to be credible enough to present the information.

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They were prepared by the former MI6 agent, who was posted in Russia in the 1990s and now runs a private intelligence gathering firm.

CNN claim his investigations on Trump were initially funded by groups and donors supporting Republican opponents during the GOP primaries and further investigation was funded by groups and donors supporting Hillary Clinton when he became a nominee.

Spokespeople for the FBI and the Director of National Intelligence have declined to comment.

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Donald Trump 'hired group of prostitutes to defile Moscow ...