Yahoo – AFP,
Douglas Gillison, February 9, 2017
Washington (AFP) - Donald Trump on Wednesday lashed out at department store chain Nordstrom for dropping his daughter's clothing line, again spotlighting the intermingling of the US presidency with Trump family businesses.
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| Ivanka Trump, pictured on February 3, 2017, will have her clothing line removed from Nordstrom and President Trump believes she's been "treated so unfairly" (AFP Photo/Brendan Smialowski) |
Washington (AFP) - Donald Trump on Wednesday lashed out at department store chain Nordstrom for dropping his daughter's clothing line, again spotlighting the intermingling of the US presidency with Trump family businesses.
The public
rebuke, which the White House later defended, called renewed attention to the
potential tangle of business interests Trump brought with him on taking office
last month.
In a tweet
posted moments after he wrapped up an address to US law enforcement, Trump hit
out at the high-end retailer for announcing last week it had decided to
discontinue sales of Ivanka Trump's fashion line due to poor sales.
"My
daughter Ivanka has been treated so unfairly by Nordstrom," Trump wrote.
"She is a great person -- always pushing me to do the right thing!
Terrible!"
Since his
surprise victory in the November presidential election, Trump has used his
Twitter feed to lambast individual companies -- from General Motors to Boeing
-- be it for off-shoring jobs or allegedly overcharging the federal government
for aircraft.
Family
business
But the
latest tweet was different in that it sought to defend part of Trump's family
business empire, which critics have said could be a source of profound
conflicts of interest for the White House.
Trump made
sure to give his message on Ivanka maximum reach by posting it both on his
personal handle @realDonaldTrump and on the official account of the US
presidency @POTUS.
Since his
November victory, Trump has touted an effort to remove himself from running his
business empire, transferring corporate control to his sons. But he has
resisted divesting, as a government ethics watchdog had called on him to do.
Critics say
the Trump businesses still pose a significant ethical quandary.
Further
playing into the running debate, Pentagon officials said Wednesday they were
looking to rent space in Trump Tower, Trump's flagship Manhattan luxury
building, to accommodate equipment and staff who accompany the president during
his stays there.
That came
on the heels of a lawsuit filed by Melania Trump in New York, which claimed
that damaging rumors reported by a British tabloid had interfered with her
"unique, once-in-a-lifetime opportunity" to earn millions of dollars
due to her raised profile as first lady.
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Nordstrom
has insisted that its decision to drop the Ivanka Trump line was
made purely on
business grounds (AFP Photo/JOE RAEDLE)
|
Boycott
calls
White House
Press Secretary Sean Spicer on Wednesday defended Trump's Nordstrom tweet,
saying the president was standing up for a family member.
"There's
clearly efforts to undermine that name based on her father's issues or
particular policies," Spicer told reporters.
"For
someone to take out their concern of the policies against a family member of
his is simply not acceptable and he has every right to speak out about
it."
Nordstrom
responded on Wednesday, reiterating that its decision to drop the Ivanka Trump
line was made purely on business grounds.
"Over
the past year, and particularly in the last half of 2016, sales of the brand
have steadily declined to the point where it didn't make good business sense
for us to continue with the line for now," the company said in a statement
to AFP, adding that it had "a great relationship" with Ivanka Trump's
business.
Nordstrom
is one of several US businesses that has faced boycott calls for its
association with the Trump brand. It is among the firms targeted in a
"Grab Your Wallet" campaign launched by anti-Trump activists in
protest at the Republican billionaire's agenda.
The
campaign on Wednesday was still targeting other retailers such as Macy's,
Bloomingdale's and Dillard's for carrying Ivanka Trump products.
Sign of the
fine line that firms are treading in the current political era, others such as
PepsiCo and Budweiser have faced a backlash from the opposite camp after moves
deemed critical of the Trump administration.
![]() |
Demonstrators
hold up a piñata of Donald Trump during a protest outside Trump
Tower on
October 12, 2015 in Chicago, Illinois (AFP Photo/SCOTT OLSON)
|
Ethical
obligations
Richard
Briffault, an expert in government ethics at Columbia Law School, told AFP that
Trump's use of the presidential bully pulpit to defend his daughter's business
"was inconsistent with any notion of the ethical obligations of a public
official."
"What
this suggests is that he hasn't fully internalized the consequence of being the
most important public official in the country," Briffault said.
Since a
1989 executive order, federal officials have been barred from using public
office for private gain, Briffault said, adding that any public criticism from
a sitting president could be interpreted as an attempt to influence that
company's business decisions.
"It
gives the appearance that he is using his position to promote the business
interests of a close relative," said Briffault.
Unlike
other companies he has attacked on Twitter, including Lockheed, Boeing and
Ford, which saw their share prices suffer following criticism from Trump,
Nordstrom's stock finished up more than 4.0 percent on Wednesday.
The news of
Trump's remarks preceded a report from The New York Times on Wednesday, which
said TJX Companies, the parent of clothing retailers TJ Maxx and Marshalls, had
told employees to discard all Ivanka Trump promotional signs and not to display
her clothing separately.



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