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Sunday, 20 November 2016
Priebus: Trump's $25m fraud settlement isn't "admitting wrongdoing.. it's leading this country without distraction"
Reince
Priebus, the Republican National Committee chair recently tapped for
Donald Trump’s White House chief of staff, is defending the
president-elect’s decision to settle a $25 million fraud lawsuit aimed at Trump University, saying Sunday that Mr. Trump wanted to begin leading the country “without distraction.”
“When
the presidency hits you, and it’s at your front door, and you realize
that you’re president of the United States for all Americans, there are
some things that are important to you and some things that you just
decide, look, let’s move on,” Priebus told CNN’s “State of the Union.”
“We’re
not admitting wrongdoing,” he went on. “Let’s just start leading this
country without distraction. That’s what you’re seeing.”
Priebus
pushed the need to see the fraud settlement in a “positive” light: “I
think that Americans should look at this as a real positive sign about
what kind of great president he is going to be and how he wants to lead
this country.”
Settling the now-defunct Trump University lawsuit,
filed by about 7,000 people, comes with a hefty fine for the
president-elect.
“Every victim will receive restitution,” New
York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said in a statement Friday, “and
that Donald Trump will pay up to $1 million in penalties to the State
of New York for violating state education laws.”
Trump, who had
already spent a significant amount of his own fortune on his White House
bid, weighed in on the fraud case Saturday via Twitter, saying he
wanted to “focus on our country” but that he would have had a “winning
trial” if he hadn’t chosen to settle.
The Trump University case isn’t the only ethical controversy to rock the presidential transition this week. Even after numerous promises
that he would turn over his business empire to his children -- and that
they would not, in turn, consult with him -- Mr. Trump continues to
take actions directly contradicting the pledged separation of his
businesses from the presidency.
Last week, Mr. Trump met with
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and had his daughter Ivanka, who is
currently an executive at the Trump Organization, attend the gathering.
And despite his expressed desires to “focus on our country,” the
president-elect also huddled with Indian business partners working on a
luxury apartment complex south of Mumbai branded with the Trump name,
according to media reports.
Priebus denied on CNN that there were any conflicts of interest with the president-elect.
“Donald
Trump has been very clear from the very beginning that his family is
very important to him,” the future chief of staff said. “I think that
while it’s unique, it’s certainly compliant with the law. And,
obviously, we will comply with all of those laws, and we will have our
White House counsel review all of these things, and we will have every
‘I’ dotted and every ‘T’ crossed, and I can assure the American people
that there wouldn’t be any wrongdoing, or any sort of undue influence
over any decision-making.”
On CBS’ “Face the Nation,”
vice president-elect Mike Pence made a similar argument, saying he was
“very confident that the president-elect and his extraordinary talented
family are going to work with the best legal minds in this country and
create the proper separation from their business enterprise.”
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