The Trump kids look likely to turn on their dad –
and I suspect Ivanka will go first
Arwa
Mahdawi
The former president is not in immediate danger of
jail, but his problems are piling up fast. Not least the fact that, in his
family, loyalty means nothing
Tue 6 Jul
2021 17.14 BST
Nothing in
life is certain except death and rich people jumping through complicated hoops
to avoid paying taxes. In case you needed any more convincing about the tax
side of that, please see the latest travails of the Trumps.
On
Thursday, the Trump Organization and its chief financial officer, Allen
Weisselberg, were charged with a “sweeping and audacious illegal payment
scheme” of tax-related crimes. While that may sound juicy, it is duller (but no
less devious) when you dig into the 15-count indictment. There is no smoking
gun, just mounds of details about company perks, such as payment of school fees
and rents that weren’t reported properly. Lots of grubby ruses that add up to
massive, and possibly illegal, tax savings.
Don’t
mistake a lack of style for a lack of substance, however. The devil – and
Donald Trump’s potential downfall – is in the detail. While it is unlikely that
Trump (who is not facing criminal charges yet) is going to jail imminently,
Thursday’s indictment may well mark the beginning of the end of his business
empire. That end will come sooner rather than later if Weisselberg, who has
worked for the Trump family for nearly 50 years, decides to turn against Trump
and cooperate with the investigation. So far, Weisselberg seems loyal, but that
could always change. Weisselberg’s family, it is worth noting, aren’t all as
pro-Trump as he is. Jennifer Weisselberg, his former daughter-in-law, has
handed over numerous financial documents regarding her ex-husband, who was also
a Trump Organization employee.
You think
the Weisselbergs sound dysfunctional? Wait until the Trumps start turning on
each other. It could be any day. On Thursday, Mary Trump, Donald’s estranged
niece, told the cable news host Rachel Maddow that she believes the former
president’s adult children won’t think twice before sacrificing their father to
save themselves. “His relationship with them, and their relationship with him,
is entirely transactional and conditional,” she said. “They’re not going to
risk anything for him, just as he wouldn’t risk anything for them.”
Trump’s
children, to be clear, haven’t been charged with anything yet. However, they
have a lot to be worried about. As Donald Trump’s biographer said recently, one
reason Weisselberg is in trouble is that he was allegedly paid as an employee
and a nonemployee contractor – allowing various tax write-offs. A New York
Times investigation reported that Ivanka Trump was similarly paid more than
$700,000 (£500,000) in consulting fees while also collecting a salary as a
full-time employee of the Trump Organization. It is likely Eric and Don Jr had
similar arrangements in place – we only know for sure about Ivanka because she
had to disclose the payments when she gave herself a job at the White House.
If any of
the Trump kids are going to turn on their dad, my money is squarely on Ivanka.
Indeed, she already seems to be distancing herself strategically from her
no-longer-particularly-useful father. A couple of weeks ago, for example, there
were reports that Trump’s complaints about the “stolen” 2020 election were
driving Ivanka and Jared Kushner away. These reported leaks about Javanka are
not new phenomena – they happened frequently throughout Trump’s presidency,
leading some to suspect it was a PR tactic by a couple keen to remain in the
good graces of liberals as well as the Maga crowd.
While
Ivanka appears to be coolly attempting to control her own narrative behind the
scenes, Donald Jr and Eric reacted to the Trump Organization criminal charges
by having histrionics on camera. Eric Trump told Newsmax last week that “Don,
Ivanka and I live really nice, clean lives”. Meanwhile, Don Jr posted a
13-minute video on Facebook calling the charges against his dad
“banana-republic stuff”. He also (rather unhelpfully) acknowledged that the
allegations Trump paid for Weisselberg’s grandchildren’s school fees were true.
“My dad did that,” he said, because he is a “good guy”. A “good guy” who
probably wishes he raised smarter kids. With children like these, who needs
enemies?
Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist


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