White House Isn't Finished Trying to Milk Every Ounce of Cringe Out of...
WOMP WOMP! Hims Stock Tanks After CEO Praises 'Moral Courage' of Antisemitic Campus...
'Public Assembly': Watch Police Harass Billboard Chris, Anna McGovern for Wearing a Sign...
AP Review of Star Wars Actor's Meeting With Biden Doesn't Match the Readout...
MOSTLY PEACEFUL UPenn Protesters Harass Students With Strobe Lights, Threats
America LAST: Biden Opens Obamacare to DACA Recipients While 25 MILLION Americans Go...
To Get YOUR White House Invite, A) Be From a Famous Movie, and...
Taylor Lorenz's UNHINGED Comments About LGBTQ Rights in Florida, Texas Make Don Lemon...
Actor Jeff Daniels Hopes Flyover State Voters Realize Trump 'Talks Down to Us'...
OOF: Chrystia Freeland Gets Buried Under a Ratio for 'World Press Freedom Day'...
Google Removes Trump PAC Ad Targeting Black Men and it is Very Suspicious
The NH Libertarian Party Goes on a Weird Twitter Spiral about Feeding Orphans
Joe Biden and Karine Jean Pierre Drag the 'Star Wars' Guy to a...
Mike Johnson vs MTG, Frat Bro Revolution, Time Magazine Meltdown!
KJP Assigns Blame for What Will Happen to the Middle Class If Biden...

George Conway (!!!) sticks up for Donald Trump, legion of Twitter's emoluments insta-scholars hardest hit

Well, here’s a first.

George Conway, the husband of Kellyanne Conway who normally spends his day bashing President Trump on Twitter,  is defending the president from a Reuters article that argued foreign government renting apartments in Trump buildings could be a potential violation of the Constitution’s emoluments clause:

Advertisement

From the article, which admits that the president doesn’t even own the units and is therefore not benefitting from say an exorbitant rent. These “legal experts” think the common charges which go to a management fee are the issue:

Six legal experts said that regardless of who owns those units, the fact that Trump was collecting fees for managing the building while foreign governments were paying to live there represents a potential breach of the emoluments clause. Certain constitutional scholars counter that the definition of “emolument” should be more narrow, a view that Trump’s attorneys share.

And as Conway points out, that’s an inane interpretation of the policy:

Advertisement

Twitter’s emoluments experts hardest hit:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement