pull down to refresh
10 sats \ 101 replies \ @Bell_curve OP 5 Jun \ parent \ on: Trump campaign partners with open node bitcoin
No he cannot
Campaign donations must be used for a campaign not personal use
He can rent a room in his hotel.
He has done it before.
For him, his security, and his family.
All paid with the donations.
reply
It has to be related to his campaign
reply
Yes, I realize.
He is using it for his campaign.
Just when you are in the hotel business, and you run a tab up in your hotel...
No conflict of interest, right?
reply
There is a conflict of interest but the reimbursement has to be within legal limits.
The conflict of interest can be worse like having your own charity or foundation
reply
"but the scale of payments to Trump's own businesses was unprecedented."
This is what the problems is.
What he is doing is legal.
But is legal always right?
reply
It’s only unprecedented because it’s Trump. If it was Biden the media wouldn’t care
reply
Im pretty sure they did their research.
"Such payments are legal as long as the campaign pays fair market value, but the scale of payments to Trump's own businesses was unprecedented."
He is only going to his businesses so that he can legally "earn" his campaign funds.
reply
I don’t doubt their research. Trump faces the most scrutiny. Others are Elon and Saylor.
If the regime likes you, they hide their research.
Regarding Trump businesses, why patronize another business if you don’t have to?
reply
Trump's 2016 presidential campaign paid millions of dollars to his own businesses, including for using his aircraft, compensating his relatives, and renting space in Trump properties like Trump Tower, his golf club, and Mar-a-Lago resort.[1] Such payments are legal as long as the campaign pays fair market value, but the scale of payments to Trump's own businesses was unprecedented.[1] The campaign paid at least $12.8 million to Trump's businesses by the end of 2016.[1]
While campaigns can pay for legitimate expenses, federal regulations prohibit using campaign funds for personal use like mortgage, rent, entertainment, country club fees, and some legal expenses unrelated to being a candidate.[2] However, Trump took the unusual step of declaring his 2020 re-election candidacy early, allowing him to continue receiving such payments indefinitely.[1]
Sources
[1] Trump's Campaign Paid Millions To His Own Properties, FEC Documents Say https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/02/03/512888131/trumps-campaign-paid-millions-to-his-own-properties-fec-documents-say
[2] Candidate | Personal use - FEC https://www.fec.gov/help-candidates-and-committees/making-disbursements/personal-use/
[3] How Private Money From Facebook's CEO Saved The 2020 Election https://www.npr.org/2020/12/08/943242106/how-private-money-from-facebooks-ceo-saved-the-2020-election
[4] Bogus 'Bowling Green Massacre' Claim Snarls Trump Adviser Conway https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/02/03/513222852/bogus-bowling-green-massacre-claim-snarls-trump-adviser-conway
[5] Mar-A-Lago Offers Trump And Abe A Spectacular Place To Get ... https://www.npr.org/2017/02/10/514496905/mar-a-lago-offers-trump-and-abe-a-spectacular-place-to-get-acquainted
reply