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Trump's penchant for gifts puts foreign policy up for sale
The Guardian Weekly
|May 23, 2025
Former White House lawyers, diplomatic protocol officers and foreign affairs experts claim Donald Trump's receipt of overseas gifts and targeted investments are "unprecedented", as the White House remakes US foreign policy under a pay-for-access code that eclipses past administrations with characteristic Trumpian excess.
The US president was feted in the Gulf states last week, inking deals he said were worth trillions of dollars and pumping local leaders for investments. He says he is prioritising “America first” - putting aside concerns of human rights or international law for the bottom line of US businesses and taxpayers. But often the bottom line has benefited Trump. His family’s wealth has ballooned by more than $3bn, according to press estimates, and the reported benefits from cryptocurrencies and other investment deals, such as plans for new Trump-branded family proper-ties, may be far larger.
Deals for billions more have been signed by businessmen close to Trump, meaning political support for the White House translates into lucrative contracts abroad.
Richard Painter, the chief White House ethics lawyer under George W Bush, said: “When we're negotiating with other countries, the concern is that our negotiating position will change if someone does a favour or delivers a gift to the president of the United States ... the impression is given that the position of the United States can be swayed and even bought.”
Others argue that the message being sent is that US foreign policy is being sold to the highest bidder.
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