This action might not be possible to undo. Are you sure you want to continue?
Conflicts of Interest and the President
Background for President-Elect Trump’s January 11, 2017 Press Conference
Prepared by Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP1
I. OVERVIEW
From President Washington to Vice President Rockefeller to President-Elect Trump, many of this Nation’s
leaders have been extraordinarily successful businessmen. Neither the Constitution nor federal law
prohibits the President or Vice President from owning or operating businesses independent of their official
duties, as a careful textual and historical analysis shows.
Generally speaking, federal conflict-of-interest laws prohibit “officers” or “employees” of the United States
from taking positions against the country’s interests, maintaining outside employment, receiving an
outside salary for official duties, or taking official acts that affect their personal financial interests.2
But these laws have historically not applied to the President or Vice President. As then-Assistant Attorney
General Antonin Scalia observed in an Office of Legal Counsel memorandum, the term “officer” typically
includes neither the President nor Vice President.3 And since 1989, Congress has approved this tradition
by expressly excluding the President and Vice President—along with Members of Congress and federal
judges—from most conflict-of-interest laws.4 The Office of Government Ethics has recently re-affirmed
that these conflict-of-interest laws do not apply to the President.5
Though Congress has long exempted the President and Vice President from federal conflict-of-interest
laws, consistent with a tradition extending back to the Founding, many of these public servants have
nevertheless sought to provide extra assurances that their undivided commitment is to the good of the
country. For example, Presidents Johnson and Carter voluntarily stepped away from their broadcasting
stations and peanut farms.6
Today, President-Elect Trump wishes to announce his own plans to transfer management of his
businesses and to voluntarily limit those businesses’ ability to engage in transactions that could pose any
conflict-of-interest concerns.
1
Authored by: Sheri Dillon, Fred F. Fielding, Allyson N. Ho, Michael E. Kenneally, William F. Nelson, and Judd Stone.
2
See generally 18 U.S.C. §§ 203, 205, 207-09.
3
Memorandum from Antonin Scalia, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, to Kenneth A. Lazarus, Associate
Counsel to the President, Applicability of 3 C.F.R. Part 100 to the President and Vice President (Dec. 1974).
4
18 U.S.C. § 202(c) (stating that, unless otherwise provided, “officer” and “employee” do not include President or Vice
President).
5
Letter from Walter M. Shaub, Jr., Director, Office of Government Ethics, to Senator Thomas R. Carper, at 2 (Dec. 12, 2016)
(“[T]he primary criminal conflicts of interest statute, 18 U.S.C. § 208, is inapplicable to the President[.]”).
6
See Megan J. Ballard, The Shortsightedness of Blind Trusts, 56 KAN. L. REV. 43, 54-56 (2007).
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
II. THE PRESIDENT-ELECT’S PLAN
Leadership and Management of The Trump Organization
President-Elect Trump will relinquish management of his investment and business assets for the duration
of his Presidency. To accomplish this, all of President-Elect Trump’s investment and business assets,
commonly known as The Trump Organization—comprised of hundreds of entities—have been or will be
conveyed to a Trust, which will be managed for the duration of his Presidency by his sons, Don and Eric,
and a Trump executive, Allen Weisselberg. Collectively—and unanimously—Allen, Don, and Eric will have
the authority to manage The Trump Organization and have full decision-making authority for the duration
of the Presidency, without any involvement whatsoever by President-Elect Trump. To implement this
transfer, President-Elect Trump will resign from all official positions he holds with The Trump
Organization entities.
Further, to ensure that The Trump Organization continues to operate in accordance with the highest
ethical standards, President-Elect Trump is appointing an Ethics Advisor to the management team. Under
the terms of the Trust Agreement, written approval of the Ethics Advisor is required for all actions, deals,
and transactions that could potentially raise ethics or conflict-of-interest concerns. President-Elect
Trump, as well as Don, Eric, and Allen are committed to ensuring that the activities of The Trump
Organization are beyond reproach, and that the Organization avoids even the appearance of a conflict of
interest, including through any advantage derived from the Office of the Presidency.
As part of her family’s transition to Washington, D.C., President-Elect Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump
will resign from all of her positions in The Trump Organization and the Ivanka Trump brand/fashion
business and will have no involvement with the management or operations of either organization. As she
and her husband Jared move their family to D.C. in the coming weeks, Ms. Trump will be focused on
settling her children into their new home and schools.
Status of President-Elect Trump’s Investments
President-Elect Trump has already disposed of his investments in publicly traded or easily liquidated
investments. As a result, the Trust will hold only two kinds of assets: liquid assets, such as cash,
obligations of the United States government, and positions in a government-approved diversified
portfolio, and the President-Elect’s preexisting, illiquid, very valuable business assets. These include
Trump-owned, operated, and branded golf clubs, commercial rental property, resorts, hotels, and rights
to royalties from preexisting licenses of Trump marks, productions, books, goods, and similar assets.
Examples of these assets include Trump Tower, Mar-a-Lago, Trump International Hotels, and Trump
Vineyard Estates.
Status of The Trump Organization’s Deals and Rules for Entering into New Deals
The President-Elect also recognizes that his election was a significant event for the country—and one
from which he should not benefit personally. The President-Elect therefore directed The Trump
Organization to terminate all pending deals—over 30 in number—which resulted in an immediate financial
loss of millions of dollars, not just for President-Elect Trump but for Don, Ivanka, and Eric as well.
Since then, The Trump Organization has not sought or entered into any new deals. It has in essence
been functioning only as an asset management company, and will continue to do so until after the new
management and ethics review structure, as set forth in the Trust Agreement, is in place. Going forward,
the Trust Agreement places severe restrictions on new deals to avoid any possible conflicts of interest or
concerns that The Trump Organization is exploiting the Office of the Presidency.
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
-2-
First, the Trust Agreement prohibits—without exception—new foreign deals during the duration of
President-Elect Trump’s Presidency. Specifically, the Trust and The Trump Organization will be prohibited
at all times during the Presidency from engaging in any new deals with respect to the use of the “Trump”
brand or any trademark, trade name, or marketing intangibles associated with The Trump Organization
or Donald J. Trump in any foreign jurisdictions.
Second, new domestic deals will go through a rigorous vetting process. At a minimum, new deals shall
require: (i) the unanimous vote of approval of the Trustees, and (ii) written confirmation from the Ethics
Advisor that the proposed transaction is both substantively and procedurally an arm’s-length transaction,
that it involves an appropriate counterparty, and that it does not raise potential conflicts of interest or
similar ethics issues. President-Elect Trump will have no role in deciding whether The Trump
Organization engages in any new deal, and he will be completely sequestered from any information
regarding the Organization’s decisions; in other words, he will learn about them only through the media,
as the American People would.
Third, the Trust Agreement prohibits The Trump Organization from entering into any new transaction or
contract with a foreign country, agency, or instrumentality thereof, including a sovereign wealth fund,
foreign government official, or member of a royal family, the United States government or any agency or
instrumentality thereof, or any state or local government or any agency or instrumentality thereof, other
than normal and customary arrangements already undertaken before the President-Elect’s election.
Further Measures Taken to Isolate President-Elect Trump from The Trump Organization
To further reinforce the President-Elect’s separation from The Trump Organization, the Trust Agreement
will sharply limit the information that the President-Elect receives regarding the Trust’s assets. Reports
transmitted to the President-Elect will only reflect the profit or loss of the Company as a whole. The
reports will not include an accounting of the performance of each individual business within the
Company. Conversely, the President-Elect will not share nonpublic information with The Trump
Organization or the Trust, and the Trust will not make use of any nonpublic information, from any
governmental source, to engage in financial transactions on the Company’s behalf.
To assist its employees in operating at the highest level of integrity and ethical standards, The Trump
Organization has established the new position of Chief Compliance Officer. The sole responsibility of the
Chief Compliance Officer is to ensure that The Trump Organization businesses are operating at the
highest levels of integrity and are not taking any actions that actually exploit, or even could be perceived
as exploiting, the Office of the Presidency. In addition, The Trump Organization has directed that no
communications of the Organization, including social media accounts, will reference or otherwise be tied
to President-Elect Trump’s role as President of the United States or the Office of the Presidency.
In summary, President-Elect Trump is taking these extraordinary steps to ensure that the Office of the
Presidency is isolated from The Trump Organization. President-Elect Trump promised the American
People that he would Make America Great Again: he takes these steps to assure the American People
that his sole focus is on that pledge—and that he intends only for the American People to benefit from his
term as President.
III. THE FOREIGN EMOLUMENTS CLAUSE
Some commentators have claimed that the Constitution prevents the President-Elect from owning
interests in businesses that serve foreign customers. In particular, they object to the Trump
International Hotel in Washington, D.C.
On assuming office, the President-Elect will be bound by—and will scrupulously abide by—his obligations
under the Constitution. That includes the obligations created by the constitutional provision that these
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
-3-
commentators highlight, the Foreign Emoluments Clause. That provision prohibits an individual holding
an “Office of Profit or Trust” under the United States from “accept[ing]” a “present, Emolument, Office,
or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State” without congressional approval.7
But these commentators are wrong to suggest that business in the ordinary course at any of the Trump
International Hotels, or at any of the President-Elect’s businesses, risks violating this obligation.
The scope of any constitutional provision is determined by the original public meaning of the
Constitution’s text.8 Here that text, understood through historical evidence, establishes that foreign
governments’ business at a Trump International Hotel or similar enterprises is not a “present,
Emolument, Office, or Title.” So long as foreign governments pay fair-market-value prices, their business
is not a “present” because they are receiving fair value as a part of the exchange.9 It clearly is not an
“Office”10 or a “Title”11 from that government. These commentators therefore must rest their argument
on the final category of prohibited benefit: “Emolument.”
As shown below, an emolument was widely understood at the framing of the Constitution to mean any
compensation or privilege associated with an office—then, as today, an “emolument” in legal usage was a
payment or other benefit received as a consequence of discharging the duties of an office. Emoluments
did not encompass all payments of any kind from any source, and would not have included revenues
from providing standard hotel services to guests, as these services do not amount to the performance of
an office, and therefore do not occur as a consequence of discharging the duties of an office.
The Constitution’s text shows that the word had this more limited meaning. Apart from the Foreign
Emoluments Clause, the term emolument appears twice more in the Constitution, and both times refers
to compensation associated with an office. First, the Incompatibility Clause bars congressmen from
assuming “any civil Office . . . the Emoluments whereof shall have been encreased during” the
congressman’s tenure. U.S. CONST. art. I, § 6, cl. 2. Second, the Compensation Clause, which
guarantees the President’s compensation during his term of office, prohibits him from “receiv[ing] within
that Period any other Emolument from the United States, or any of them.” Id. art. II, § 7, cl. 7.
Although the Supreme Court has never interpreted the scope of the Foreign Emoluments Clause, it long
ago understood “emolument” this way in another context. The Court explained that “the term
emoluments . . . embrac[es] every species of compensation or pecuniary profit derived from a discharge
of the duties of [an] office.” Hoyt v. United States, 51 U.S. 109, 135 (1850). Other legal experts early in
the Nation’s history used the word the same way, including Alexander Hamilton and James Madison in
The Federalist Papers12 and Attorneys General in numerous formal opinions.13
Supporting this understanding is parallel language in the nearly adopted Titles of Nobility Amendment to
the Constitution. In 1810, Congress voted by overwhelming margins to extend the Foreign Emoluments
Clause to all citizens, not just federal officials.14 The proposed amendment would have prohibited private
citizens’ acceptance of “any present, pension, office, or emolument, of any kind whatever, from any
7
U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 8.
8
See ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW 78-92 (2012); Antonin Scalia, Originalism: The Lesser Evil, 57 U. CIN. L.
REV. 849, 862-64 (1989).
9
See BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (defining “gift” as “[t]he voluntary transfer of property to another without
compensation”).
10
See id. (defining “office” as “[a] position of duty, trust, or authority, esp. one conferred by a governmental authority for a public
purpose”).
11
As suggested by the immediately preceding prohibition on the granting of titles of nobility, U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 8, “Title”
refers to official titles of honor or distinction.
12
See, e.g., THE FEDERALIST 2, 177, 243, 268, 340, 379-80 (G. Carey & J. McClellan eds., 2001).
13
E.g., Salaries of Officers of Arkansas Territory, 1 Op. Att’y Gen. 310, 310 (1819); Salaries to Ministers and Consuls, 2 Op. Att’y
Gen. 470, 471 (1831); Marshal of Florida, 6 Op. Att’y Gen. 409, 410 (1854).
14
20 ANNALS OF CONGRESS 671, 2050-51 (1853).
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
-4-
Emperor, King, Prince, or foreign Power,” stripping violators of their citizenship and barring them from
state or federal office.15 The amendment came within two states of ratification—indeed, because of a
publishing mistake, several generations believed it was part of the Constitution.16
Yet there is no evidence anyone at the time thought the proposed amendment restricted citizens’ ability
to engage in commerce with foreign nations, their governments, their representatives, or their
instrumentalities. That suggests that the public did not understand the prohibition on accepting foreign
emoluments to prohibit commerce with foreign states or their representatives through fair-market-value
exchanges—and, by implication, that the Foreign Emoluments Clause does not reach these transactions.
Given the importance of foreign trade in the Nation’s early decades, the absence of any indication that
the proposed amendment would have had this effect further supports understanding “emolument” not to
encompass fair-market-value transactions—consistent with the term’s other uses in the Constitution, its
common legal use at the Founding, and the Supreme Court’s explanation of the term.
There are further problems with understanding “emoluments” to include any kind of benefit an individual
might receive. For one thing, it would have been redundant to list “present” and “Emolument” in the
Clause separately, because any present would already qualify as a benefit. For another thing, it would
lead to absurd results. For example, if the Constitution’s Article II prohibition on the President receiving
“any other Emolument from the United States, or any of them” refers to any benefit, including fairmarket-value transactions, then the President violates the Constitution by purchasing Treasury bonds or
receiving interest on a retirement account from federal or State bonds.17 That cannot be correct.
Commentators who argue for a more expansive understanding of the Clause tend to focus not on the
Constitution’s original public meaning, but on more subjective conceptions of the policies behind the
Clause. Moreover, while non-judicial opinions provided to guide members of the Executive Branch have
suggested that the Clause has a broad scope, none of the published opinions has gone so far as to
classify fair-market-value transactions as emoluments. And the factual circumstances giving rise to
opinions finding Foreign Emoluments Clause violations are different from those here.18
Other opinions fully accord with the Constitution’s original public meaning and are incompatible with the
notion that the Constitution prohibits the President-Elect’s businesses from renting hotel rooms to foreign
governments at fair-value rates. One opinion, for example, declined to view a pension as an emolument
because it was neither a gift nor a salary.19 Another reached a similar conclusion about civil damages
paid to a victim of Nazi persecution because they were “not paid as profit, gain, compensation,
perquisite, or advantage flowing to him as an incident to possession of an office or as compensation for
services rendered.”20 Still another acknowledged that emoluments were “profit[s] arising from office or
15
Id. at 671.
16
See Gideon M. Hart, The “Original” Thirteenth Amendment: The Misunderstood Titles of Nobility Amendment, 94 MARQ. L. REV.
311, 313-15 (2010); Curt E. Conklin, The Case of the Phantom Thirteenth Amendment: A Historical and Bibliographic
Nightmare, 88 LAW LIBR. J. 121, 126 (1996) (“[T]hree or more generations of Americans grew up assuming that the amendment
was law.”).
17
See Andy Grewal, Should Congress Impeach Obama for His Emoluments Clause Violations?, YALE J. ON REG.: NOTICE & COMMENT
(Dec. 13, 2016), http://yalejreg.com/nc/should-congress-impeach-obama-for-his-emoluments-clause-violations/.
18
See, e.g., To the Secretary of the Air Force, 49 Comp. Gen. 819, 820–21 (1970) (informant for Columbian government); In re:
Major Stephen M. Hartnett, USMC, Retired, 65 Comp. Gen. 382, 383 (1986) (employment by Royal Saudi Navy); Application of
Emoluments Clause to Part-Time Consultant for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 10 Op. O.L.C. 96, 96 (1986) (work on
contract with Taiwanese government); Authority of Foreign Law Enforcement Agents to Carry Weapons in the United States, 12
Op. O.L.C. 67, 69 (1988) (foreign law-enforcement agents); Applicability of the Emoluments Clause to Non-Government
Members of ACUS, 17 Op. O.L.C. 114, 119 (1993) (partnership in law firm that represented foreign government); Emoluments
Clause and World Bank, 25 Op. O.L.C. 113, 114 (2001) (contractual employment relationship).
19
President Reagan’s Ability to Receive Retirement Benefits from the State of California, 5 Op. O.L.C. 187, 191 (1981).
20
Assistant Comptroller General Weitzel to the Attorney General, 34 Comp. Gen. 331, 334 (1955).
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
-5-
employment” and generally required services for a foreign government amounting to accepting an office
from a foreign state.21
In short, the Constitution does not forbid fair-market-value transactions with foreign officials. To put to
rest any concerns, however, the President-Elect is announcing he will donate all profits from foreign
governments’ patronage of his hotels and similar businesses during his presidential term to the U.S.
Treasury. Historically, when federal officers received a gift or emolument from a foreign state, they
surrendered possession of it to the federal government,22 though they were permitted to retain amounts
necessary to offset their business expenses.23 Although the Constitution does not require the PresidentElect to do the same for profits from his businesses’ fair-market-value transactions, he wants to eliminate
any distractions by going beyond what the Constitution requires.
21
To C.C. Gordon, U.S. Coast Guard, 44 Comp. Gen. 130, 130-31 (1964); see also Foreign Diplomatic Commission, 13 Op. Att’y
Gen. 537, 538 (1871) (“[A] minister of the United States abroad is not prohibited by the Constitution from rendering a friendly
service to a foreign power, even that of negotiating a treaty for it, provided he does not become an officer of that power.”).
22
E.g., 12 ANNALS OF CONGRESS 443 (1851).
23
REMINISCENCES OF JAMES A. HAMILTON 210 (1869) (officer who received horses as gift from foreign state was entitled to be paid
for “expenses incident to their transportation and keeping”); cf. Applicability of the Emoluments Clause to Non-Government
Members of ACUS, 17 Op. O.L.C. 114, 119 (1993) (objecting to retention of law firm profits, not pre-expense revenues).
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
-6-
This action might not be possible to undo. Are you sure you want to continue?
We've moved you to where you read on your other device.
Get the full title to continue reading from where you left off, or restart the preview.