Friday, February 1, 2019

Democrats are zeroing in on Treasury’s Mnuchin

Democrats are zeroing in on Treasury’s Mnuchin

   
Democrats are zeroing in on Treasury’s Mnuchin
© Getty Images
Democrats have a new investigative target: Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.
The leaders of three powerful House committees are requesting a trove of documents related to the Treasury Department’s decision to lift sanctions on companies tied to Oleg Deripaska, a prominent Russian oligarch linked with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Treasury lifted the sanctions on Deripaska’s United Co. Rusal and two other firms after he agreed to reduce his ownership below 50 percent and relinquish control of the firms, according to details of the deal released by the Treasury Department.
But Democrats have raised concerns about the agreement, suggesting it could still afford Deripaska influence and even “defacto control” over the companies.
Others have raised ethical concerns about Mnuchin’s reported business ties to billionaire Republican donor Len Blavatnik, who is an investor in Rusal and reportedly stands to benefit from the deal.
The Treasury Department has publicly pushed back on those assertions, saying Mnuchin had no “direct business relationship” with Blavatnik and calling suggestions of a conflict of interest “baseless.”
The inquiries underline the fervency among Democrats to use their newfound oversight powers in order to investigate the Trump administration — including any links between people in Trump’s orbit and the Kremlin.
“There is already a lot of skepticism about Donald Trump and his intuition about what our foreign interests should be,” said Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi(D-Ill.), who was recently tapped to serve on the House Intelligence Committee.
Deripaska has also attracted attention as a result of his ties to Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chair who has pleaded guilty in connection with Mueller’s probe to offenses arising from his lobbying work on behalf of pro-Russian forces in Ukraine.
Trump officials insist the administration has been tough on Russia, pointing to decisions to send lethal aid to Ukraine, sanction Russians and expel suspected Russian spies. The Treasury Department unveiled penalties on Deripaska and his firms last April under a law aimed at punishing Moscow for interfering in the election and other malign activities.
Mnuchin has argued the sanctions aimed to hit Putin’s ally, and not all the employees who happen to work for his companies. 
“One of the goals of sanctions is to change behavior, and the proposed delistings of companies that Deripaska will no longer control show that sanctions can result in positive change,” Mnuchin said in January.
The Treasury Department announced in December the administration’s plan to lift sanctions on the three companies — Rusal, its parent company En+ Group PLC and JSC EuroSibEnergo.
The European Union has also backed Mnuchin’s decision to delist Rusal and  En+, arguing the move would prevent “serious damage” to the European aluminum industry.
The firms as part of the deal agreed to commit “to full transparency with Treasury by undertaking extensive, ongoing auditing, certification, and reporting requirements.”
Penalties on Deripaska and his property were left in place by Treasury.
The plan has nevertheless encountered pushback on Capitol Hill.
In January, lawmakers unsuccessfully attempted to defeat the administration’s decision to lift the sanctions. The Republican-controlled Senate narrowly rejected a Democratic-led effort to prevent the administration from lifting sanctions on the firms in a vote of 57-42.
Democrats in the lower chamber have already hauled in Mnuchin to testify on the sanctions behind closed doors and left voicing dissatisfaction. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) described it as “one of the worst classified briefings we have received from the Trump administration.”
On Tuesday, the chairs of the House Intelligence, Financial Services and Foreign Affairs Committees demanded Mnuchin turn over all documents relevant to the decision making process to lift the sanctions off the three companies — “regardless of classification” — by next Tuesday.
Other Democrats have also pressed for more information, citing ethics concerns.
House Oversight Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, sent a letter to Mnuchin on Tuesday inquiring about reports of his Hollywood business ties to Blavatnik, a Soviet-born British-American businessman and co-owner of SUAL Partners Limited, a shareholder in Rusal that is also partly owned by Russian oligarch Viktor Vekselberg.
The New York Times reported in January, before the sanctions were lifted, on a confidential document showing that SUAL would own 22.5 percent of Rusal after the deal is completed. The report also suggested the deal would be less of a blow to Deripaska that the administration has signaled publicly.
The lawmakers cited press reports of Mnuchin’s business and personal ties to Blavatnik, including one stating Blavatnik was an initial investor in RatPac Entertainment, the film financing firm that later partnered with Mnuchin’s firm, Dune Entertainment. Mnuchin divested his stake in RatPac-Dune in 2017 after becoming Treasury secretary.
“We are seeking an explanation as to how you managed your own potential conflicts of interest arising from your personal and professional relationships with major Rusal shareholder Len Blavatnik, a key beneficiary from your decision to delist Rusal,” Cummings and Wyden wrote.
The letter followed an inquiry from Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) about transactions involving his interest in Rat-Pac-Dune and any ethics advice he received regarding those transactions or discussions about the Deripaska-linked sanctions.
Speier specifically cited a 2017 report in the Hollywood Reporter that Mnuchin sold his shares in Rat-Pac-Dune to Blavatnik for $25 million.
Speier wrote on Jan. 23 that Mnuchin’s failure to recuse himself from the sanctions discussions is “deeply troubling” and represents a “conflict of interest.”
A Treasury spokesman initially said that Speier's letter was "premised on false information." The department formally responded to Speier on Thursday, according to her office, and stated that Mnuchin did not sell his shares to Blavatnik or his companies but instead to a "third party" with no links to him.
Speier sent a follow-up letter seen by The Hill suggesting Mnuchin name who purchased his stake in the "interest of transparency." The congresswoman also accused Mnuchin of failing to address a series of questions laid out in her initial letter and asked for a proper response within two weeks.
A Treasury spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment on Speier's latest letter, but told The Hill previously that the department received and is reviewing the other letters.
   
LOAD COMMENTS (212)

Cory Booker launches his presidential campaign with a call for America to ‘rise’

X
NEWARK, N.J. — Cory Booker is in. The New Jersey senator launched his White House bid on Friday morning with an email to supporters declaring, “I’m running for President of the United States of America.”
His letter was followed up by the release of a video in which he focused on the idea that people in the country share “common pain,” a case that has been a centerpiece of his speeches throughout the past year.
“Together, we will channel our common pain back into our common purpose. Together, America, we will rise,” Booker said in the clip.
His entry into the crowded Democratic primary field is not a surprise. Booker became mayor of Newark in 2006 and became famous for with a blend of social media savvy and hands on, emotional politics that hearkened back to the rhetoric of the civil rights movement. Since his time in City Hall, Booker has been widely touted as a potential presidential prospect. That speculation only intensified after he was elected to the Senate in 2013.
Booker kicked off his campaign surrounded by the three things that have been hallmarks of his career thus far: spirituality, sentiment and Newark. He spent the night before his announcement at Metropolitan Baptist Church, a congregation he regularly attends a few blocks from his home in the city.
“Senator Booker requested that we would come together and have prayer,” said the church’s pastor, Rev. Dr. David Jefferson. “This is representative of who he is and what he believes in, that he dare not make a move without asking the almighty God.”
The small service was attended by several of Booker’s friends and allies who had been told to come to the church in the past day. It concluded with Jefferson encouraging those in the room to “hug somebody.”
Afterwards, Booker briefly spoke to reporters. He told Yahoo News the decision to run came after his appearances on the campaign trail this past year, which included extensive travel to key primary states.
“I saw the receptivity to me giving my authentic message out there, not shying away from the urgent calls of justice, not shying away from the need to stand up for those who are being left behind and left out,” Booker said.
Booker felt his positive and emotional approach resonated even in a time of deep political division.
“I saw that people didn’t just want a politician that’s going to stand up and say, ‘I’m going to punch Trump in the face.’ … I saw that people really did want to rise above it and pull people together back to our common ideals and common principles,” he said.
Booker said he was “humbled” and “feeling blessed” to be entering the presidential race.
“I still look on the Senate floor and feel this sense of gratitude. The reason why I still live down the street  … is because these are the folks that helped me do things that were beyond my wildest imagination,” Booker explained.
When pressed about how he could possibly invoke humility while putting himself forward for the highest office in the land, Booker countered that he hopes to set a new political paradigm.
“What is real strength? Is it bombast? Is it swagger? Is it braggadociousness? Is it strut? No. I think … real strength is seen in vulnerability,” said Booker.
AdChoices
“I think it’s seen in those people who stood before fire hoses and armed troopers unarmed. I think it’s people who are willing to let the truth be told that were all imperfect folks trying to make a better nation.”
Booker is eager to display this approach on the campaign trail.
“I look forward to offering up a very, very strong spirit of love and kindness and grace and decency along with my policy ideas,” he said.
With an extremely crowded primary field vying to fight the famously combative President Trump, Booker is almost certainly in for a bruising race. And in spite of all the positivity and tenderness, Booker insisted he will be a forceful presence in the field.
“We have this mistaken sense that being strong is being mean, that being tough is being cruel. It’s just not,” explained Booker, adding: “You could be a strong tough street fighter and still be a person of love, and grace, and kindness, and courageous empathy and vulnerability.”
In his announcement video, Booker highlighted his personal story, which began with parents who secured his family a place in the New Jersey suburbs with the help of civil rights activists who helped them fight discriminatory housing practices. It featured footage of him walking through the streets of Newark near his home.
“I still live there today, and I’m the only senator who goes home to a low-income, inner city community, the first community that took a chance on me,” Booker said in the video.
He went on to detail his vision for a potential presidency including a focus on criminal justice reform, which has been one of his signature issues in the Senate.
“I believe that we can build a country where no one is forgotten, no one is left behind, where parents can put food on the table, where there are good paying jobs with good benefits in every neighborhood, where our criminal justice system keeps us safe, instead of shuffling more children into cages and coffins, where we see the faces of our leaders on television and feel pride, not shame,” Booker said.
According to a spokesperson, Booker plans to spend Friday morning doing a series of radio interviews. He will also appear on ABC’s “The View.” Booker is spending the next weekend at home in Newark before taking off on Feb. 8 for a swing through the three early primary states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.
Unlike some of his rivals, Booker is not beginning his presidential bid with any interim steps.
“There’s no exploratory committee,” a Booker campaign source told Yahoo News. “He’s all in.”
_____
Read more from Yahoo News:

Trump calls the US presidency 'one of the great losers of all time,' because he says he's not making more money (The Call To Save His Beloved America Had A Financial Price. However He Would Find It Would Cost Himself & His Family So Much More)

Trump calls the US presidency 'one of the great losers of all time,' because he says he's not making more money (The Call To Save His Beloved America Had A Financial Price. However He Would Find It Would Cost Himself & His Family So Much More)



X
  • President Donald Trump said he loves his job at the White House — with one exception.
  • "I lost massive amounts of money doing this job," Trump claimed in an interview with The New York Times published on Thursday night. He said he's not in it for the money, and called the financial outlook of the presidency "one of the great losers of all time."
  • Trump also appeared to address some of the scrutiny surrounding potential conflicts of interest with his business enterprises, namely his Trump-branded hotels.
  • The former real-estate mogul now earns a base income of $400,000 per year as president, which he donates to various organizations.
President Donald Trump said he loves his job at the White House — with one exception.
"I lost massive amounts of money doing this job," Trump claimed in an interview with The New York Times published on Thursday night, saying he wasn't in it for the money, and calling the financial outlook of the presidency "one of the great losers of all time."
Despite this, Trump says he loves the job.
"I don't know if I should love doing it, but I love doing it," he said.
Trump also appeared to address some of the scrutiny surrounding potential conflicts of interest with his business enterprises, namely his Trump-branded hotels. World leaders and lobbyists have frequented the hotels during his presidency, raising suspicions that they may have done so to try to curry favor with Trump.
AdChoices
Related: Donald Trump golfing through the years 
Slideshow preview image
 
41 PHOTOS
Donald Trump golfing through the years
SEE GALLERY
"You know, fortunately, I don't need money," Trump said. "But they'll say that somebody from some country stayed at a hotel. And I'll say, 'Yeah.' But I lose, I mean, the numbers are incredible." Trump did not provide any specifics about much money his companies have earned or lost while he's been in the White House. Multiple news reports published in the last two years describe portions of his businesses losing money since he took office.
The former real-estate mogul now earns a base income of $400,000 per year as president, which he donates to various organizations, including the Small Business Administration, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the National Park Service.
Trump's tax payer-funded income is noticeably smaller than what he was earning as the star of NBC's reality show "The Apprentice." Financial documents for the show revealed Trump earned over $30 million in 2005, and $65 million between 2004 to 2007 for revenue and distribution-based royalties, according to Yahoo Finance.


Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *