White House Survivor

Wilbur Ross has timed his scandal hitting the news quite well.

...Ross promised to divest from almost all his holdings upon entering government, drawing bipartisan praise en route to an easy confirmation. “You have really made a very personal sacrifice,” said Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat of Connecticut. “Your service has resulted in your divesting yourself of literally hundreds of millions of dollars.” In November 2017, Ross confirmed in writing to the federal Office of Government Ethics that he had divested everything he promised.

But that was not true. After weeks of investigation, Forbes found:

  • For most of last year, Ross served as secretary of commerce while maintaining stakes in companies co-owned by the Chinese government, a shipping firm tied to Vladimir Putin’s inner circle, a Cypriot bank reportedly caught up in the Robert Mueller investigation and a huge player in an industry Ross is now investigating. It’s hard to imagine a more radioactive portfolio for a cabinet member.
  • To this day, Ross’ family apparently continues to have an interest in these toxic holdings. Rather than dump them all, the commerce secretary sold some of his interests to Goldman Sachs—and, according to Ross himself, put others in a trust for his family members. He continued to deal with China, Russia and others while evidently knowing that his family’s interests were tied to those countries.
  • In addition, five days before reports surfaced last fall that Ross was connected to cronies of Vladimir Putin through a shipping firm called Navigator Holdings, the secretary of commerce, who likely knew about the reporting, shorted stock in the Kremlin-linked company, positioning himself to make money on the investment when share prices dropped.
  • Absurdly, maintaining all those conflicts of interest appears to be entirely legal—a reflection of ethics laws woefully unprepared for governing tycoons like Donald Trump and Wilbur Ross.
  • Ross appears to have broken one law, however: submitting a sworn statement to federal officials in November saying he divested of everything he had promised he would—even though he still held more than $10 million worth of stock in financial firm Invesco, his former employer. He also continued to hold a short position in a bank called Sun Bancorp, a company he had promised to divest. The next month, Ross got rid of interests in both.
 
Bet Ross is not the only one with a convoluted self-serving set of business arrangements like that. I can think of another so-called billionaire who will have an equally fascinating financial history to be revealed.
 
Pruitt seems to be hanging in their.Guess massive corrouption is OK if a Fellow Republican does it.....
 
After the apparent chaos of the early part of the Trump Administration where it seemed that senior members were leaving on a weekly basis, we seem to have reached a situation where there is a stable (or at least consistent) team assembled around the President.

I'm too biased to be able to say whether this means that we have a well-oiled and smoothly operating machine at the top of government or whether President Trump has cobbled together a motley group who are so desperate to remain in position and/or so bought into the ethos of the Trump Presidency that they are eager to serve or whether this group are simply compliant enough not to give President Trump too many reasons to fire them.
 
After the apparent chaos of the early part of the Trump Administration where it seemed that senior members were leaving on a weekly basis, we seem to have reached a situation where there is a stable (or at least consistent) team assembled around the President.

I'm too biased to be able to say whether this means that we have a well-oiled and smoothly operating machine at the top of government or whether President Trump has cobbled together a motley group who are so desperate to remain in position and/or so bought into the ethos of the Trump Presidency that they are eager to serve or whether this group are simply compliant enough not to give President Trump too many reasons to fire them.

Scott Pruitt out

So less than 48 hours after that consistency we have a major individual leaving. Who's next?
 
Surprised Pruitt lasted that long. But the real question is which performing monkey is he going to be replaced with. Or is Mafia Don going to run the EPA by himself as well. Or just not bother with replacing him at all (that option actually has odds!)
 

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