Senate Democrats say National Park Service being used for ‘influence peddling’ by accepting donations for Trump’s ballroom – live | Trump administration

Senate Democrats say National Park Service being used for ‘influence peddling' by accepting donations for Trump's ballroom

Five Senate Democrats say a National Parks Service trust dedicated to preserving the White House grounds is now being used for “influence peddling,” by accepting donations to pay for Donald Trump’s “gold-plated $300m ballroom”.

The senators, Elizabeth Warren, Richard Blumenthal, Ron Wyden, Chris Van Hollen, and Ed Markey put their allegations in a letter to the National Park Service comptroller and the president of the Trust for the National Mall.

“We are concerned about the risk of quid-pro-quo arrangements in which large corporations get backroom favors from the White House and President Trump gets his multimillion-dollar ballroom – all while American families face rising prices during a government shutdown”, the lawmakers wrote. “The American public deserves answers about the circumstances surrounding the demolition of the East Wing of the White House, about President Trump’s attempts to build a gold-plated $300m ballroom, and about whether the Trust is being used to facilitate corruption in the forms of corporate special interests’ insider access to the White House.”

The Trust was established in 2007 as a nonpartisan, nonprofit partner of the National Park Service. “However,” the senators write, “the scale of funds raised for President Trump’s ballroom, President Trump’s personal involvement in fundraising for the project, and the number of corporate donors with business before the Trump Administration raise new questions about whether the Trust is facilitating corrupt access to and favor-seeking from President Trump and his Administration.”

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In an exchange on Friday with our colleague Shrai Popat, a budget expert says that the Pentagon cannot simply pay soldiers with private donations.

As we reported earlier, the defense department confirmed on Friday that it had received a donation of $130m from an unnamed “friend” of the president who wanted to it to towards paying soldiers during the government shutdown. That sum would be just 2% of what’s needed to cover even two weeks of payroll for the Pentagon’s employees.

However, Romina Boccia, director of budget and entitlement policy at the Cato Institute, suggests that the law seems to bar the Pentagon from paying troops with donations.

“The department is welcome to acknowledge this donor’s intent but that does not change the legal restrictions on Congress needing to appropriate funds to pay military salaries,” Boccia says. “Notice the careful couching the Pentagon notice includes which states that the money was received under ‘general gifts acceptance authority.’”

“The military may accept private donations only in two cases: to support institutions such as military schools, hospitals, libraries, museums, and cemeteries; and to provide aid to service members or civilian employees who are wounded or killed in the line of duty, along with their families,” she adds.

”Money is fungible but Congress still needs to authorize funds in order for US troops to get paid,” Boccia notes. “The only way to legally get around this restriction is if Congress decided to recategorize troop pay as mandatory or direct spending.”

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