Trumpโ€™s Business Dealings With U.A.E. Sheikh Fuels More Corruption Allegations

On the February 1, 2026 edition of ABCโ€™s This Week, host George Stephanopoulos raised a question that cuts to the heart of the ethical cloud hanging over the Trump administration: how can President Trumpโ€™s private business dealings with a senior foreign power broker not constitute a glaring conflict of interest? Pressing Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Stephanopoulos pointed directly to reporting that suggests the lines between U.S. policy, presidential power, and private profit are once again dangerously blurred.

Citing a Wall Street Journal investigation, Stephanopoulos noted that Sheikh Tahnoum bin Zayed Al Nahyanโ€”one of the most powerful figures in the United Arab Emirates and a central player in its national security and intelligence apparatusโ€”made a substantial investment in a Trump familyโ€“linked cryptocurrency venture around the time Trump was inaugurated for his second term. The WSJ underscored how extraordinary this arrangement is: it is virtually unprecedented for a senior foreign government official to hold an ownership stake in a business tied to a sitting U.S. president. The concern is obvious and unavoidable. Such a financial relationship creates at least the appearance, if not the reality, of leverage over the president of the United States by a foreign actor whose interests may not align with Americaโ€™s.

Those concerns only deepen when viewed alongside subsequent U.S. policy decisions. Not long after Sheikh Tahnoumโ€™s investment became public, the United States approved the sale or transfer of advanced, high-end computer chips to the UAEโ€”technology the country had previously been restricted from accessing due to national security concerns. The timing invites scrutiny. At minimum, it raises the question of whether a foreign officialโ€™s financial stake in a presidentโ€™s business created privileged access or influence over U.S. decision-making. At worst, it suggests a pay-to-play dynamic in which private investment is rewarded with favorable government action.

The national security implications are significant. The United Statesโ€™ dominance in artificial intelligence and advanced computing rests heavily on its control of cutting-edge semiconductor technology. Allowing these chips to flow to the UAE carries the risk that they could be shared, resold, or otherwise end up in the hands of strategic competitors such as China. Even the possibility of that outcome should demand extreme caution. When such decisions coincide with financial entanglements involving the presidentโ€™s private ventures, the question is no longer hypotheticalโ€”it becomes whether U.S. security interests are being subordinated to personal enrichment.

This episode fits a broader pattern that has defined Trumpโ€™s return to power: persistent allegations that public office is being used as an extension of private business interests. From foreign investments and licensing deals to policy decisions that appear to benefit political allies and financial partners, the administration has repeatedly asked the public to accept ethical gray zones that past presidents were expected to avoid outright. The strategy has been familiarโ€”dismiss every concern as partisan noise or the hysterics of the โ€œradical leftโ€โ€”but the sheer volume and seriousness of the allegations make that defense increasingly untenable.

As the 2026 midterms approach, these issues are unlikely to fade. Voters may disagree on ideology, but conflicts of interest that implicate foreign influence and national security tend to cut across partisan lines. If Democrats can frame these stories not as abstract ethics debates but as concrete examples of corruption that put American interests at risk, they may find a potent line of attack. Simply put, there are now too many red flags, too many suspicious alignments between money and policy, for the administration to wave them away. Whether Trump chooses to confront these questions or continue to ignore them may help determine not only the political narrative of his second term, but the balance of power in Congress come 2026.

Eric Trump Discusses His Fatherโ€™s Indictment On Fox Newsโ€™ Hannity Show

$upport via Cash App

Eric Trump appeared on Fox Newsโ€™ Hannity show (03/30/23) moments after the bombshell revelation that a Manhattan grand jury had indicted his father for crimes related to the hush money payments he made to adult film star Stormy Daniels.

A visibly angry Eric Trump accused the Manhattan DA of among other things, abusing his power, telling host Hannity that he is neglecting rampant crime in New York to go after his father. He also cast his father as the target of an elaborate political witch hunt by both the Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg and the New York Attorney General Leticia James.

Eric Trump specifically told host Hannity(2:08 ): โ€œMy fatherโ€™s only crime was winning the 2016 electionโ€ฆFrom the time my father went down that escalator, we got subpoena after subpoena. We would have people like Alvin Bragg, Leticia James, and so many others, go out and campaign on the promise that they would take down a person, not knowing anything about themโ€ฆThese people are evil, theyโ€™re wicked, and is why people have lost trust in the system in the U.S. This is third world tactics.โ€

Eric Trump then threw in the political bias allegation saying(2:43 ): โ€œYou have Hunter Biden who has crack pictures on his laptop, you have Bill Clinton who is paying Paula Jones $850,000, you have Bill Clinton who is diddling interns in the White House in the Oval Office, you have Hillary Clinton whoโ€™s deleting 33,000 emails while under congressional subpoena, and no one says a damn thing about any of those people, but when my fatherโ€™s leading by 35% in the polls, and they know heโ€™s going to be the guy that Joe Bidenโ€ฆwill ultimatelyโ€ฆrun againstโ€ฆthatโ€™s who they go after, right up against the statute of limitationsโ€ฆThey will do anything to take the man out of the raceโ€ฆโ€

Interestingly, Eric Trump also alleged that his fatherโ€™s prosecution was somehow orchestrated by billionaire Democratic super donor George Soros. He specifically said(5:40): โ€œAmericans see people like [George] Soros paying $1 million to get Alvin Bragg elected, and then this guyโ€™s going out and doing this guyโ€™s dirty work. People get itโ€ฆThat was their calling card. This was a mission. This is what they promised their donors. This is what they promised Soros that they would do. Itโ€™s why they received the big checks.โ€

He strangely concluded by saying his father โ€œneeded a passโ€, which is interesting because it would appear to suggest that he is conceding his dadโ€™s criminal conduct, but only lamenting the fact that he is not getting a break like DOJ presumably gave Hillary Clinton over the email saga. Hmm, very interesting argument indeed.

Bottom line folks, it is perfectly normal for Eric Trump to come out guns blazing in defense of his father over the newly disclosed indictments. The problem he might find himself in however, is that neither he, nor the public, currently knows exactly what allegations are laid out in the indictment(sealed). Ericโ€™s reaction is perfectly understandable, but the wise option would be to wait for his dadโ€™s court arraignment in a few days, where the allegations against him will be laid out in detail.

Maybe, just maybe, the indictment will lay out very serious allegations against his father, which will justify the DAโ€™s/ grand juryโ€™s actions, even in the eyes of Republicans.

For those of you very happy with @Emolclauseโ€™s activism donโ€™t shy away from the โ€œtip jarโ€ below on your way out. You may also Cash Ap

Email the author at admin@grassrootsdempolitics.com

Become an Octapharma Plasma donor. Make up to $200 in one week and help save lives too!ย Learn More

Bombshell Intercept Report Exposes DHSโ€™ Mission Creep From Fighting Terrorism To Disinfo

$upport via Cash App

A very interesting segment on Fox Newsโ€™ Tucker Carlson show(10/31/22) featured a bombshell Pulitzer-worthy report by The Interceptโ€™s Lee Fang, which revealed that the Department of Homeland Security(DHS), has for five years now, been collaborating with Twitter, Facebook, and other social media companies, in determining whose speech needs to be suppressed. This of course flies in the face of the โ€œprivate companyโ€ defense usually used to justify questionable speech infringement practices by the social media giants.

More importantly, Lee Fangโ€™s bombshell also touched on the apparent โ€œmission creepโ€(his words) of DHS, where over the last five years, the powerful agency had unilaterally(without congressional approval) shifted from its stated focus of combating terrorism and terrorist groups like Al-Qaida, to combating disinformation online.

Asked whether the Biden administration was working with tech companies to censor people, Lee Fang responded (1:10): โ€œYeah, thatโ€™s right Tucker. We looked at really hundreds of documents that paint a vivid picture of the FBI, the DHS, closely collaborating with top social media platforms, Twitter and Facebook, to censor various forms of content under the banner of fighting disinformation, and the story shows a couple of things, one, it shows what you just mentioned, a very cozy relationship between the government and these tech giants. Thereโ€™s those monthly meetings that you just mentioned, but also, just very cozy emails and texts, not a very adversarial relationship. We looked at one text where a Microsoft executive texts Jen Easterly, the top disinfo director at DHS, appointed by[President]Biden, basically saying that the private sector needs to get more comfortable with the government closely collaborating on reports, talking about the expanded role for DHS in censoring a really broad collection of topic areas of policy and political topics.โ€

Lee Fang then touched on what I believe is by far, the biggest bombshell from his piece, and that is, the โ€œmission creepโ€ aspect. Fang said(2:11): โ€œJust broadly speaking, the story also just looks at the mission creep of DHS. This is an agency that was founded in the aftermath of 9/11 to combat foreign terror threats of Al-Qaeda and the like, but over the last five years, itโ€™s kind of evolved in its mission, its move towards fighting disinfo, and their justification is disinfo radicalizes the homeland, it can lead to disruptions in public health, or political violenceโ€ฆโ€

Even given DHSโ€™ understandable explanation for going after online disinformation, no reasonable person can ever conclude that Congress would have approved the same powerful tools/tactics used to counter terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda, to be applied against U.S. residents for basically saying the โ€œwrong thingsโ€ on social media. Sadly however, this is exactly where we find ourselves today, with DHSโ€™ speech police designating people they deem โ€œmisinformersโ€ as terrorists, and then mercilessly destroying their lives and livelihoods using among other things, the military. This is shameful conduct which most Americans have always associated with third world dictatorships.

It is because of DHSโ€™ mission creep, that Yours Truly believes Lee Fangโ€™s bombshell piece deserves a Pulitzer. Simply put, DHSโ€™ mission creep, which at the very least should have been run through Congress for approval prior to enforcement, has not only seriously impacted the lives and livelihoods of many U.S. residents who have nothing to do with terrorism, but has also robbed them of their rights under the first amendment.

Congress needs to immediately step in to not only address DHSโ€™ mission creep, but also to hold the officials involved accountable, preferably, via referral for criminal prosecution given the way their unconstitutional actions upend innocent peopleโ€™s lives

Itโ€™s also important to point out here what history has taught us, and that is, not everything the government labels โ€œmisinformationโ€ is necessarily so. Often times, there are topics the government simply doesnโ€™t want out there, being discussed in public. One recent classic example is directed energy weapons. For decades, government agents, and their surrogates in the mainstream media, went out of their way to label people who expressed concerns about these weapons as delusional conspiracy theorists. In 2022 however, we not only have the same directed energy weapons being openly discussed by the same mainstream media channels who denied their existence, but also, the government considers the threat so serious, that Congress swiftly enacted a handsome compensation scheme for victims of such attacks.

Bottom line folks, as host Tucker Carlson correctly stated, this bombshell piece by The Intercept is not only a great story, itโ€™s also a huge public service for which Lee Fang deserves a lot of praise and reward. The only question now is whether Congress will do its job, and rein in Mission Creep DHS, and its unconstitutional speech police.

For those of you very happy with @Emolclauseโ€™s activism donโ€™t shy away from the โ€œtip jarโ€ below on your way out. You may also Cash App

Email author at admin@grassrootsdempolitics.com

Become an Octapharma Plasma donor. Make up to $200 in one week and help save lives too!ย Learn More

Moderate House Dems Shoot Down AOCโ€™s Intel Oversight Amendment

$upport via Cash App

On 12/9/21 Rep Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez(D-NY) introduced an amendment(Amendment 148 to H.R. 5314โ€“Protect Our Democracy Act), that would have restored the oversight powers Congress always intended the Government Accountability Office(GAO) to have, including over our intelligence agencies. Our intelligence agencies, as everyone knows, are notoriously impervious to any Congressional oversight, and often hide behind a vague 1988 Department of Justice opinion to justify their need for secrecy. Rep Ocasio-Cortezโ€™s amendment would have taken away that cover, ensuring much-needed transparency from our intelligence agencies. Surprisingly, 23 Centrist Democrats voted with House Republicans to kill her amendment.

As Rep Ocasio-Cortez correctly pointed out on the House floor, given the kinds of abuses weโ€™ve witnessed during Trumpโ€™s presidency, it is only prudent that we restore GAOโ€™s oversight powers over all federal agencies, including our intelligence agencies. Any reasonable person would agree, that it is foolhardy to assume that former President Trump abused all other federal agencies for his selfish political interests, except our intelligence apparatus, the easiest ones to abuse given the secrecy with which they are allowed to operate.

Rep Ocasio-Cortez said on the House floor: โ€œSince itโ€™s creation in 1921, the Government Accountability Office(GAO) has had the purview to conduct oversight of all federal agencies with the goal of reducing waste, fraud and abuse, and holding accountable bad actors. However and unfortunately, most of our intelligence agencies today are not fully cooperative with the GAO, pointing to an outdated and vague 1988 Department of Justice opinion. Our amendment would allow the GAO to act as a check on this behavior, not creating new powers, but restoring the power Congress always intended the GAO to have. This amendment is welcomed by many in the intelligence community, who want to protect their important work and resources from abuse, particularly after the last presidency we just endured. We drafted this amendment in partnership with the community and Iโ€™m proud to have the support of Representative Adam Schiff who serves as the Chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. In fact many of my colleagues have already taken a stand in support of this legislation because in 2010, the House passed a virtually identical amendment.โ€

The amendment failed with a final tally of 233 nays, 196 yeas, with 4 members not voting. Among the 233 nays were 23 Centrist Democrats who Yours Truly is compelled to name. The nay Dems included Reps Cynthia Axne(IA), Cheri Bustos(IL), Matt Cartwright(PA), Angie Craig(MN), Antonio Delgado(NY), Val Demings(FL), Jared Golden(ME), Josh Gottheimer(NJ), Chrissy Houlahan(PA), Conor Lamb(PA), Susie Lee(NV), Elaine Luria(VA), Tom Oโ€™Halleran(AZ), Chris Pappas(NH), Kurt Schrader(OR), Kim Schrier(WA), Terri Sewell(AL), Mikie Sherrill(NJ), Abigail Spanberger(VA), David Trone(MD), Filemon Vela(TX), Jennifer Wexton(VA), Susan Wild(PA).

Ever since the Patriot Act was enacted after the terrorist attacks of September 11 2001, there have been growing calls from civil libertarians and others, for there to be some checks on the almost absolute powers we granted our intelligence agencies after the 9/11 attacks. The reasoning behind this is pretty simpleโ€“power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely. Fast forward to the Trump administration and the abuses we witnessed occurring across all federal agenciesโ€“(DOJ being used for the Big Lie, Military on Black Lives Matter protesters in DC, numerous abuses of DHS, โ€œfailureโ€ by our intel agencies to anticipate Jan 6th insurrection)โ€“ and the need to look into our intel agencies becomes an absolute necessity. Itโ€™s against this backdrop that Rep Ocasio-Cortez, with the support of many in the intel community, are pushing for more transparency. One would assume given these set of circumstances, that more oversight would be a no-brainer for Democrats, but apparently not.

Concerns about possible abuses of our intel agencies run the gamut, from the mundane warrantless snooping of our electronic communications (emails, texts, voicemails, etc), to much more serious allegations that if proven, constitute serious violations of our commitments under the United Nations Conventions Against Torture(CAT). These include allegations of 24/7 organized stalking, non-consensual for-profit human experimentation on people entered on terrorism watchlists by weapons manufacturers and others in Big Tech(remote neuromonitoring), militarized attacks on civilians(usually watchlisted) with directed energy weapons, manufactured terrorism cases, etc. These are serious human rights violations that can only come to light through proper oversight. It also bears pointing out that similar egregious abuses have in the past been attributed to our intel agencies, a recent good example being the non-consensual experimentation on U.S. civilians using radiation. President Clinton in 1995, did the just and moral thing by not only exposing this inhumane conduct, but also making whole the surviving victims. The same can be done today.

Bottom line folks, Rep Ocasio-Cortez deserves a lot of praise for pushing for reform on a topic most politicians, and quite frankly the mainstream media, have been terrified to venture into. One only hopes that she musters the courage to push on with it, despite the recent setback on the House floor. Simply put, time has come for our intel agencies to be subjected to some real oversight.

For those of you very happy with @Emolclauseโ€™s activism donโ€™t shy away from the โ€œtip jarโ€ below on your way out. You may also Cash App

Email author at admin@grassrootsdempolitics.com

Become an Octapharma Plasma donor. Make up to $200 in one week and help save lives too!ย Learn More