If you paid any attention over the course of the last several years, you know that Donald Trump and his family famously have trouble telling the truth, which is another way of saying they‘re total liars. Trump himself, for instance, told 30,573 lies as president, and God knows how many since leaving the White House. Melania Trump claimed to have graduated from college with a bachelor’s degree in architecture, which of course never actually happened. Eric Trump insisted the Trump Organization stopped doing international business when his dad became president, a certified pants-on-fire statement. In April, it emerged that Donald Trump Jr. seemingly lied to prosecutors investigating the 2016 inauguration—and according to a new report, his sister Ivanka Trump may have too.
Per Mother Jones reporter David Corn, during a December 2020 deposition, the ex-president’s eldest daughter was asked by the D.C. attorney general’s office if she had any “involvement in the process of planning the inauguration.” (D.C. attorney general Karl Racine sued the Trump Organization, the Trump International Hotel, and Trump’s 2016 inaugural committee in January 2020, alleging the groups funneled large amounts of inauguration cash into the first family’s pockets via the hotel.) Ivanka, who was an executive at the Trump Organization before becoming a senior presidential adviser, reportedly responded under oath, “I really didn’t have an involvement,” adding that if her “opinion was solicited,” she “would give feedback to my father or to anyone who asked my perspective or opinion.” That, she claimed, was that.
But according to documents obtained by Mother Jones, that does not actually appear to be true! Instead, it seems that the former first daughter was intimately involved in the decision-making for various aspects of the inauguration:
According to Mother Jones, Kushner responded the following day, writing, “Thanks, Stephanie—looks like it’s going to be a special event! So glad you are involved!” Ivanka Trump responded later that day, writing: “As mentioned, my interest in hosting [the dinner or reception for women entrepreneurs] depends on the quality and theme of the event.” She asked Winston Wolkoff to coordinate with with Abigail Klem and Rosemary Young, who served as the president and marketing head, respectively, of Ivanka’s company, saying, “It would be great to have a cross section of industry and also invite top female cabinet members and lawmakers.” In the email, Ivanka also said she would be happy to assist Winston Wolkoff if she ran into any problems coordinating with Reince Priebus, Trump’s soon-to-be White House chief of staff, and Katie Walsh, Priebus’s deputy: “please let me know if you don’t get the direction that you need from Reince and Katie and I will step in,” she wrote.
While the women entrepreneurs event never panned out, Ivanka reportedly remained very involved in the planning of other aspects of the inauguration. For example:
As a reminder, “I don’t recall” was a frequent response by Don Jr. during his deposition in the same case.
Separately, text messages viewed by Mother Jones show Ivanka instructed Winston Wolkoff to ensure there would be “tons” of reporters at the candlelight dinner that was being held the evening before the inauguration. When Winston Wolkoff replied that the Trump transition’s communication team was not sending out information on these events to all the media, Ivanka took decisive action. She reached out to Sean Spicer and then responded to Winston Wolkoff, writing, “He is on it and will circle up with…you.” Elsewhere, a planning document showed that menus needed Ivanka’s approval. In her book, Winston Wolkoff wrote that she met with Ivanka and the soon-to-be president in his office in mid-December 2016 and presented them with plans for 18 inauguration events and then. Days later, Winston Wolkoff told Mother Jones, she met with the family in Ivanka’s office for “a run-through of the entire inauguration,” including the communications strategy, branding, and slides on events.
Like Don Jr., who essentially claimed in his deposition that he wouldn’t be able to pick Winston Wolkoff out of a lineup—despite the fact that video shows him lavishing praise on her for the “incredible” work she did preparing for the event at a dinner the night before the inauguration—Ivanka attempted to downplay her own relationship with the inauguration producer, calling her “a person I knew in New York who does events,” saying, “I didn’t know Stephanie Winston that well.” But, again, that does not appear to be entirely accurate:
Of course, it’s not at all surprising that the former first daughter would suddenly want to claim she barely knew Winston Wolkoff who, during the planning of the inauguration, questioned if the Trump Hotel was overcharging the committee, a key part of the D.C. A.G.’s lawsuit. Per Mother Jones, on December 17, 2016, she emailed Ivanka, Gates, and others to express her concern, writing: “Please take into consideration,” warning that that the PIC’s spending would eventually be audited. (Winston Wolkoff is a cooperating witness in Racine’s lawsuit against the Trump Organization and the PIC.)
Lawyers for Ivanka Trump and the Trump Organization did not respond to a list of questions from Mother Jones. After the lawsuit was filed in January 2020, the Trump Organization said in a statement that it was “a clear P.R. stunt” and that “The rates charged by the hotel were completely in line with what anyone else would have been charged for an unprecedented event of this enormous magnitude and were reflective of the fact that hotel had just recently opened, possessed superior facilities and was centrally located on Pennsylvania Avenue.”
Last December, after the news broke that she had sat for a five-hour deposition, an extremely huffy Ivanka Trump insisted on Twitter that the D.C. suit was a politically motivated witch hunt. To which Racine responded: “We filed suit after gathering evidence that the Presidential Inaugural Committee knowingly entered into a grossly overpriced contract with the Trump Hotel. Any claim to the contrary is incorrect. DC law requires nonprofits to use funds for stated public purposes, and to avoid unreasonable, wasteful expenses. Our investigation revealed the Committee willfully used nonprofit funds to enrich the Trump family.”
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If making political contributions to lawmakers who tried to overturn the election is wrong, Toyota doesn’t want to be right
Enriching the fortunes of elected officials whose lies helped cause the Capitol insurrection? Toyota wants some a that! Per The Hill:
It was just one harmless, innocent little vote to burn down democracy in the name of a wannabe tyrant! Let he who hasn’t tried to block the results of a free and fair election cast the first stone!
In a statement, a spokesperson for the company explained that it only cares about issues that affect its bottom line, and if a lawmaker who is good for the auto industry happens to also be a terrible person, that’s a minor matter they’re willing to overlook. “Toyota supports candidates based on their position on issues that are important to the auto industry and the company. We do not believe it is appropriate to judge members of Congress solely based on their votes on the electoral certification.”
It seems Don Jr. may have taken his father up on the suggestion to freebase bleach
Or whatever causes this:
Quite the required reading list you got there
Elsewhere!
McConnell attacks Democrats’ infrastructure strategy, threatening deal despite Biden’s olive branch to GOP (CNBC)
Swiss bank UBS will allow most employees to work from home permanently (NYP)
Federal health officials find vaccine benefits outweigh small cardiac risk for teens, young adults (Washington Post)
Transgender Boy Wins Bathroom Fight as Top Court Spurns Case (Bloomberg)
Judge dismisses FTC and state antitrust complaints against Facebook (CNBC)
Juul to Pay $40 Million to Settle N.C. Vaping Case (NYT)