For those concerned about Donald Trump profiting from his presidency, the latest headlines paint a deeply unsettling picture. For example, Politico ran this report yesterday afternoon:
The Secret Service spent more than a quarter of a million dollars at President Donald Trump’s properties over the course of five months in 2017, newly released documents show.
The documents outline Secret Service credit card expenditures for Trump properties and businesses between Jan. 27 and June 9, 2017, and were obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request via the nonprofit watchdog group Property of the People.
The article added, in case it’s not obvious, that the taxpayer-funded expenditures “raise new questions about the extent to which Trump is personally profiting from the federal government, which is prohibited by the Constitution’s Domestic Emoluments Clause.”
And speaking of the Constitution’s Domestic Emoluments Clause, the Washington Post yesterday reported on a related new controversy.
When Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin came to Washington in January for two nights — one of many visits the Republican had made to the nation’s capital — he stayed at President Trump’s D.C. hotel. Kentucky taxpayers initially footed the $686 bill, records obtained by The Washington Post show.









