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The media’s colossal failure: Trump continues to get away with his many scandals, lies and shady business ties
Newsweek's bombshell report this week should have shaken the Trump campaign to its core. Why hasn't it?
Topics: Donald Trump, Editor's Picks, Elections 2016, GOP, Hillary Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Media, Newsweek, Elections News, News, Politics News
A tremendous amount of the coverage during this presidential campaign has centered around the issue of “transparency.” The problem is that this coverage has been tremendously lopsided resulting in a huge misunderstanding on the part of the public and this misunderstanding may put Donald Trump in the White House. The latest Quinnipiac poll asked who voter think is the more transparent, Clinton or Trump, and 54 percent believe Trump is the more transparent to only 37 percent for Clinton. The problem is it’s just not true. Trump is the least transparent candidate in memory and the press knows it. Why don’t the people?
This theme began with the partisan Benghazi investigations in congress from which came the discovery of a trove of Hillary Clinton’s emails and the fact that she had used a personal email while she was Secretary of State. The press spent months pursuing that story without showing any evidence of unethical behavior but Clinton’s prickly relationship with the press over the years has led to a presumption of guilt for any possible appearance of impropriety. (This piece by Jonathan Allen explains how that works.)
And then there are the health records. Clinton released a letter from her doctor over a year ago in the same form as Romney and Obama laying out the basic outline of her health issues and attesting to the fact that she is fit for the presidency. Her cough and bout of pneumonia (and a calculated right-wing whisper campaign) brought more accusations that she was refusing to be transparent. She released over 30 years of tax returns, more than any candidate in history. The Foundation has also released all of its financials to the public, Bill Clinton will give up his role and it will curtail all its charitable activities around the world if she wins. Now there are demands that it be shuttered completely so there can be no question of any conflict of interest anywhere.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump has only released what the FEC requires to run for president. He’s the first nominee in half a century to refuse released no tax returns at all. (His son let the cat out of the bag this week, however, admitting that he didn’t plan to release them because people would ask too many questions. ) Trump’s own foundation seems to be some kind of elaborate con in which Trump used other people’s money to pass himself off as a philanthropist, taking a few little goodies for himself in the process. There’s also good reason to suspect he used it to launder a pay-off to Florida’s Attorney General for not investigating his other scam, Trump University (for which he’s being sued for fraud all over the country.) He’s refusing to release those records too. He produced an absurd letter from his very strange doctor last fall and then this week went on the controversial Dr Oz’s daytime show and released a more professional letter from the same doctor attesting to his stamina and high levels of testosterone.
But nothing compares to the epic conflicts with his privately held company The Trump Organization which, considering the endless yammering throughout the campaign about transparency, has received far less attention than it should have. Some business pages gave a cursory look at the potential complications and reported on how previous candidates handled the matter and running down the legal restrictions that apply. Wealthy candidates have generally divested themselves of any businesses and converted their investments into index funds or cash or put them into a blind trust which is administered by a disinterested party.