How Nepotism Law Might Affect Jared Kushner and Trump's White House
Source: ABC
The possibility that president-elect Donald Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, could assume a senior advisory role in the White House, has raised a number of legal and ethical questions about the role of family members in the epicenter of presidential power.
Such an appointment - in a formal or informal capacity - would occur within a legal gray area of the federal 'anti-nepotism' statute, according to several ethics experts consulted by ABC News.
The Trump campaign has repeatedly insisted that Kushner has not yet applied for any formal role in a Trump White House, though Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway told "Good Morning America" Thursday that Trump "wants [Kushner] to be an adviser to him, which he will continue to be."
ABC News reported Wednesday that Trump's transition team requested security clearance for Kushner the day after Trump received his first presidential daily brief, though Conway said no "formal" request has yet been made.
Read more: http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/nepotism-law-affect-jared-kushner-trumps-white-house/story?id=43619177
While not unprecedented, the law (here) does seem to exclude the children from key roles in the Rump's team. Whether an "informal" role is specifically addressed is sort of fuzzy, supposedly. The gray area really is huge...
Along with the so-called "blind trust" crap, more and more it starts looking like too many dictatorships in places other than the US. This entire fiasco is looking scarier and scarier...
OldHippieChick
(2,434 posts)He will do whatever he wants - gray area or no- and no one will do anything about it. Ditto blind trust. Not enough law firmly in place to make this clear, so he will do as he pleases and damn what anyone thinks.
Raastan
(266 posts)No one has ever told tRump what to do; no one has been able to tell him "no"; laws and rules of decency mean nothing to him. He has ignored it all his whole life.
Why would he start now?