I'm Ayesha Rosco, and you're listening to the Sunday story from Up First, where we go beyond the news of the day to bring you one big story. After he was first elected President in 2016, Donald Trump bucked tradition and refuse to release his tax returns. Although some of his tax information has come out, Trump has continued to try to shield information relating to his personal wealth. Since Trump's re-election in 2024, there's been increasing evidence that Trump and his family are personally profiting from his presidency. To learn more about how the Trumps may be cashing in, we're bringing you a story from our friends over at NPR's Planet Money, where host Mary Childs and Sara Gonzales went on a little presidential accounting adventure.
We are one year into President Donald Trump's second term, and some things are really different this time around.
Going over some math to be all up to date.
That's New Yorker reporter David Kirkpatrick.
Now, as we go through this, I turn pages. Is that a problem?
No, I think we actually like that sound.
Is that right? Okay, fine.
David has been doing the near impossible task of following every new business and business deal and financial transaction that Trump and his family have made this past year and in the first term. He's noticed this shift.
In the first term, they said voluntarily, We're not going to do any hotel or other business deals overseas because that would be bad optically. That's gone. That's out the window. This term, they've done deals all over the place overseas. In the first term, we actually said, We're not going to do any foreign deals.
That's Donald Trump Jr. Talking.
The reality is it didn't stop the media from constantly saying, You're profiteering anyway. It was like, We stopped entirely.
This time around, we said, Hey, we're going to play by the rules, but we're not going to go so far as to stymie our business forever, lock ourselves in a proverbial padded room because it almost doesn't matter.
They're going to hit you no matter what. So effectively, they've just said, since we're going to get criticized, we might as well take the money and run. And that's when they started making money, hand over fist.
It's not just foreign hotel deals or other investments from abroad. It's crypto, merch, President Trump's social media platform that he makes official White House announcements on.
In fact, it's hard to find a case where they've turned down an opportunity to make money off the presidency.
Okay. Before Trump's first term, David says Trump was in a tight spot financially. He was losing income from licensing and endorsements. At the beginning of his second term, he was in an even tighter spot, David says. At the time, he owed hundreds of millions in fraud and defamation lawsuits.
But after just six months into his second term, Trump's financial situation started looking real good. Like, real good. Just, zoop, shot in six months. Let's just get the number out there. What is the total amount?
Yeah, I'd say approaching $4 billion.
Almost $4 billion. That is the number, according to David. That is how much Trump and his family have made by this point in his second term. Almost $4 billion, and almost all of it made this past year.
Disclaimer, this isn't just money that Trump himself has made, but his sons, too. Then there's some in there that his wife, Melania, and son-in-law have also made. There's no real way to detangle Trump from his family, because even though Trump has transferred management of the Trump organization to his sons, Trump still profits from the business deals that they make, and Trump can withdraw profits or assets whenever he wants.
Now, David says he went out of his way to not include money that the family would have made if Trump were not President. So he didn't count many deals, some big ones, that he says would likely have happened anyway. And he didn't count profit made from regular pre-existing businesses.
Somebody just likes to stay in a fancy hotel with lots of gilding. Okay, fine. That's legit. He owned those properties before. We'll call that fair. That's not making money off of the presidency. The only deals that I've focused on are the ones where it was just inconceivable that Trump or his family would have made this money, would have done this deal, sold this crypto, or agreed to manage this property for some lucrative contract if he weren't the president.
One of the reasons presidents get a salary is supposed to be so that they don't worry about personal gain. The founding fathers also wanted to prevent presidents from being susceptible to corruption.
But I mean, a lot of presidents, Republican and Democrat, have made money after their president once they leave office, like Bill Clinton's very well-paying speaking engagements, George W. Bush's book, Barack Obama's Netflix deal.
Also, while they're in office, presidents will essentially sell access to the president and even sell positions, like when they're running for re-election, raising campaign money. There's examples of you donate and then you become the ambassador to something.
Well, there's tons. Ambassador is a classic example. Ambassadors are routinely, I would say, in every presidency given to big donors. Secretary of Commerce is one position where that often happens. W He's not the first to sell access. He's not the first, really, to sell position. I don't want to defend it, but it's routine and it's familiar. It's what they all do. President Clinton famously let donors stay in a Lincoln bedroom. That's a notorious example. That's not what we're talking about here.
Right. Those are campaign donations. They are not personal profit. They don't go to the President.
Trump is the first President to to make so much money explicitly off of the White House for himself and his family. Money that actually goes into his own pocket that he can use at his pleasure after he leaves office. So that's really what I tried to focus on.
So what are you counting?
So I'm counting cash in hand. I'm counting money that has been paid to the Trump family that they've put into the bank.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money. I'm Sarah Gonzales.
And I'm Mary Childs. Today on the show, we get out the counting machine and tally up the minimum amount of money Trump and his family have made or profited, as David puts it, off of the presidency.
That's almost $4 billion. We go line by line and stop at the most interesting ways that Trump and his family have made all that.
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We're back with a Sunday story. Today, we take a ride with our colleagues over at Planet Money who've been looking into the profits flowing into the Trump family since the start of the President's second term. Here's NPR's Sara Gonzales and Mary Childs.
David Kirkpatrick set out to not just come up with the number, the how much money Trump and his family have made number, that approaching $4 billion number. He wanted to also show why some of their new deals probably would not have happened if Trump wasn't the President of the United States.
And this was not an easy undertaking.
The Trump family has left a variety of clues to their finances, but none of them are totally transparent. So you've got to look at the court cases that have been about their reporting to their banks, and you've got to look at what they say in their public financial disclosures, and you've got to look at what they say publicly as well. So there's a lot of different ways to try to count up their money. None of them are perfect, and you have to extrapolate among them.
So in the scale of how perfect, would you say you're 75% there, 50% there?
I'd say I'm 100% if your target is to be conservative. What I have here is a at least number, a minimum number.
Just one thing before we get into the full accounting.
Okay, but what happened to the Emoliment Clause? I thought the whole deal was that you're not supposed to profit off of the presidency.
Well, the Emoliment's Clause, there's two Emoliment's clauses.
There's the one that restricts the president from getting paid by the federal government or states besides his salary, and the other restricts gifts from foreign leaders.
So think of the DC Hotel. Remember the DC Hotel? That was the first big instance in the first Trump term where people were worried about foreign leaders, but also CEOs, Booking rooms there to try to curry favor with the President as an impermissible emaliment. There were lawsuits, but they were never fully litigated before he left office.
It feels so quaint now.
It feels so quaint. I know. People were so strung out about those overpriced martinis, and really, that's nothing.
David says Trump didn't make money off the DC hotel. It apparently repelled as many potential customers as it attracted. Some foreign leaders and lobbyists didn't want to be caught up in some emaliment's scandal.
In the end, The DC Hotel, estimated gain, zero.
That was from the first term. In general, from Trump's first term, he and his family did not profit all that much. A couple of hundred million. But the second term is a different story. It's really the basis of David's hefty magazine article.
If we were going to whittle down your list to the top three most fun or creative or unusual ways that Trump and the Trump family have gotten richer or profited off of the presidency, what are your highlights?
The most lucrative ways and the most creative ways are different. I have to say the one that surprised me the most is the merch. Me too.
I love the merch one.
So merch is the most surprising to me. Crypto is the biggest in its many forms. Then I would say the Gulf Real Estate is the other one that's the most striking.
Those are the three we're going to pause and go into detail But we're going to tally up what the Trump family has made across a few different categories, like hospitality deals, finance, the full list.
First up, the funnest category, merch.
Everybody, every politician, every campaign sells merch. They all sell it for the campaign, but it's campaign money. You can't use it personally. The Trumps were very innovative. They actually sell a line of Trump-branded merchandise that looks very much like you're supporting the Trump campaign or the MAGA movement. But in fact, that money goes into their own pockets.
The Trump sneakers, Trump Bibles, Trump guitars, Trump gets some of those profits. Technically, he is diverting money that would have gone to his own campaign when he does this.
Yeah, it's like a designer knocking himself off. That's basically what's going on here.
From all the merch, Trump has made about $27. 7 million.
Maybe it's small change, but hats off. That's a real innovation.
Another real Well, innovation is actually around official campaign money. Trump found a loophole, a way to convert campaign money into money that he could use to pay for his legal defense in lawsuits against him, like when E. Jean Carroll sued for defamation after her sexual abuse allegation case or when Trump was charged with trying to overturn the results of the 2020 election. The campaign money loophole, according to David, earned Trump $100 million worth of legal defense. Add that to the other merch money.
Legal fees in Trump merch, estimated gain, 127. 7 million.
Next up.
Truth Social. Truth Social, with a very, very generous estimate of about 25 million. It's safe to say that it owes all of its success to his status as president.
David calls this the media category. It includes social media, but also media deals like a payment from Amazon to Melania to make a movie about Melania's life. Also, it includes suing the media.
Yeah, this category includes all the many lawsuits Trump has brought against big media companies like ABC, CBS, Metta. The estimate for the gains from the lawsuits and deals is about $91 million.
I think especially in the case of the lawsuits, all of which were deemed to be frivolous by most media law experts, it's fair to call those payments that he would not have received were he not the sitting president.
So lawsuits plus the truth social gain, $116 million and counting.
Next up, the private jet, the Qatari Royal Jet. The Qatari government technically gifted this jet to the US government, but it's later supposed to go to the Trump presidential library. And David says that there is a way for presidents to benefit from their presidential libraries. So that's why he counted it.
The Qatari Royal Jet. I give that a value of about 150 million. It's a used jet after all.
Now we are going to get into bigger categories, like a category that David calls hospitality. These are hotel and real estate deals and earnings both a prod and in the US. We will start domestically with Mar-a-Lago.
All right, Mar-a-Lago. Estimated gain, $125 million.
Obviously, this was a club that Trump owned before he ever became president. David says he really went out of his way on this one to calculate only how much extra in profits Trump's presidencies have brought him. For example, after the 2016 election, Trump started hiking up the initiation fee for Mar-a-Lago members. It used to be about $100,000. In 2017, it went up to $200,000. Now, it's a million dollars.
Okay, hotel deals abroad. There's a Trump Hotel in Vietnam.
The Trump Hotel, Hanoi. In Vietnam, some documents have emerged to show that the Vietnamese government is providing favorable expedited treatment to a truly vast hotel, golf, and condominium project under the Trump name because Trump is the President. That estimated gain comes to about 40 million. And there, I think I'm being quite conservative.
And listen, Trump makes hotel deals, right? This is what he was doing way before he was ever President. And there's an argument that the Trump organization should be allowed to still make these kinds of hotel and golf course deals. And this is why David is not counting every deal, right? He is only counting, he says, deals that seem special, striking, deals or terms that he says are unlikely to have happened if Trump wasn't the president or incoming president, like these other deals in the Middle East, for example, specifically in the Persian Gulf.
The Trumps had not done much business in the Persian Gulf. Suddenly, as he's on his way to being the Republican nominee and on his way back into the White House, they get a string of enormous deals with the same Saudi company across Oman, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and Qatar. Would those deals have happened if he weren't the President? No, of course they wouldn't have.
Why, of course they wouldn't? Why?
If you're going to open a big resort in the Persian Gulf, and you could go to the Four Seasons, you could go to Marriott, you could go to the Ritz, you could a lot of these giant companies that lower costs because of their size, why would you go to the Trump Organization, which has so little track record in the Gulf? The Trump Organization is a very small management firm. Usually, if you're going to hire somebody to run your hotel and license a name for your hotel, if it's Marriott or one of the behemoths, they'll hold out for a 30-year contract. But if it's David Kirkpatrick Hotel Management, you're lucky if you can get a 10-year contract. But reportedly, according to the New York Times, the deal he got in Oman for a giant hotel, condo, golf course operation there was a 30-year deal. So that's another clue that this is an extraordinary a thing.
Those are not the kinds of deals that the Trump organization has gotten it ever.
Certainly not abroad.
In these Persian Gulf hotel deals.
I come up with an estimated gain of $105. 8 million.
So David finds between the Persian Gulf hotels, Vietnam and Mar-a-Lago, the Trump family has made about $271 million.
Next category, finance deals.
All right. So Jared Kushner.
Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, after he was senior advisor to President Donald Trump in Trump's first term, he gets into private equity after basically being a real estate guy all his life.
He opens a private equity firm, but he reaches out to Saudi Arabia, the rulers of Saudi Arabia, who he'd been very good to in office, and he asked them for a $2 billion investment. Now, I was able to obtain, years ago, the minutes of the meeting of their advisory board evaluating that investment, and it was unanimously negative. Everybody said, This guy has no experience in private equity. We have no reason to believe that he is going to be successful. No US investors have gone in, and he's asking us to be the first with $2 billion. We He didn't do this. The government of Saudi Arabia did it anyway. Now, would they have done that if his father was not the former and possible future president? No, I think we can say they wouldn't have.
Jared's cut of that investment, $320 million.
If you think that Jared Kutner's gain here shouldn't count towards the whole family gain, David says, Fine, subtract it. He made this list as a choose your own adventure.
The same goes for this other finance deal that Don Jr. Got as partner of an investment fund.
1789 Capital.
David says, Here also, it is unlikely Don Jr. Would have gotten this job based just on his work experience had his dad not been president.
Estimated gain, 19. 6 million.
All right, we're just going to do a little running total check here from the finance deals, the hotel deals, the lawsuits, all the way down to the merch deals. We are at about a billion dollars in gains for Trump and his family. But there is one final category with a bunch of things in it. So now we're getting to the big stuff. Now we get into much bigger profits here, right?
We're on our way to bigger stuff. So crypto. Now, the crypto category has to be broken down into a variety of smaller categories. The first form of crypto that the Trump family got into were non-fungible tokens, which are basically digital cartoons of President Trump and later his wife.
This is where Trump looks super muscular and he's like a superhero, right? That those are the NFTs. Right.
Or biker Trump with an electric guitar. I put their estimated gain from the sale of those non-fungible tokens at 14. 4 million. Then we get to what I call token investments.
Token investments are another crypto category. The Trump family profited from the sale of digital tokens from a crypto company called World Liberty Financial, with an estimated gain of 974. 5 million dollars. So almost a billion dollars there.
Then there's a form of crypto known as a stablecoin, which they gave a pretty fun name to.
Usd1.
Usd1, like the US dollar.
Their first customer, and really their main, possibly only customer so far, has been the government of the United Arab Emirates. The United Arab Emirates agreed to buy $2 billion in stablecoins coin. I put the profits from that at about $243 million.
I'm curious what you think of the USD1 crypto thing. It seems very intentional. Well, in crypto, in broad strokes, the Trump family play is to use the credibility and imprimatur of the sitting president to build trust in what otherwise strikes people as a pretty sketchy asset, that is, crypto.
So calling it USD1 and reminding everybody that's associated with the President of the United States is a good way to build faith and credibility as this digital currency as the equivalent of a dollar. So that makes sense to me. That's really what they're up to.
Then there is American Bitcoin.
American Bitcoin is a Bitcoin mining company that the Trump brothers have founded with a friend.
David says the Trump sons contributed mainly their name.
Their share 20% would be worth about 115 million.
Okay. Next up, Trump Media, the parent company of Truth Social, has reinvented itself as a Bitcoin holding company.
This is the big ticket item. This is the biggest of the bunch.
Trump Media has been selling shares of its own company, which David and analysts say trades at a wildly inflated value because of its association with President Trump.
Then they've used some of that cash to buy Bitcoin. President Trump owns a stake of about 41% in that company. If you just look at the Bitcoin and cash on its books, a 41% stake of that was worth $1. 3 billion at the time that the magazine went to press. A Bitcoin has gone down a bit in price since that time. I did another little back of the envelope calculation last night. That number would come out to $1. 08 billion if I did the math now.
Okay, so a little down.
A little down, but still a lot of money.
Anything over 1 billion is... That's right. Yeah. Okay. All right. Are we on the last one?
We're on the last one, which is dollar sign Trump. That is the- It's Trump meme coin, right? That is the Trump meme coin. Now, a meme coin does not purport to hold value. It's just a novelty. In fact, it's not even something you can show anyone. It's really just a mark on a digital ledger that says, I own one Trump meme coin. I put the estimated gain from Trump and Melania meme coins at 385 million.
And that makes $3. 8 billion. So that's how David got to that almost $4 billion number.
We did reach out to the White House. Press Secretary, Caroline Levant, has said many times that President Donald Trump does not profit off of the presidency, and that actually, Trump has sacrificed money that he could have made had he just been working on his businesses. But the White House doesn't seem to disagree that Trump is making money. So we asked them, How can the President be making money, and yet you still say he's not profiting?
Their response was to refer us back to Caroline's earlier comments.
But I mean, surely, Trump is not the only President to make money, not just after their term, but while they are President. That's after the break.
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All right. We wanted to know how common it is for a US President to make money, like Trump has, while they are the sitting President. We called up someone who would know.
My name is Fred Wertheimer.
Your name sounds so familiar, Fred.
Well, at least the last name.
Fred's wife, Linda Wertheimer, is considered one of the founding mothers of NPR, recently retired.
And Fred is the President of Democracy 21. It's a nonprofit that works to reduce the influence of big money in politics, non-partisan.
I've worked with Republicans and Democrats for decades.
Fred is a big government ethics and campaign finance reform guy, and he says the US has never seen a president make so much money.
It doesn't exist at the level of which President Trump is making money.
I mean, okay, like this in terms of scale, but like, famously, infamously, Hunter Biden. Hunter Biden made money off of- Hunter Biden was not a president.
You asked me about president.
No. Yes, it is.
Hunter Biden is an example of a close relative of a president using the President's name to make money.
When you look at the relatives of presidents, profiting or even benefiting, there are plenty examples of that in our history, Fred says. But still, all those examples, very different in terms of the amount of money, even Hunter Biden.
He did not make anywhere near the amount of money that President Trump's sons are making.
Fred says there are Some are examples of presidents having conflicts of interest, though, and profiting some from the presidency.
There are a couple. There aren't a lot. There is President Lyndon Johnson.
Okay, we're going a little back.
His wife owned a small radio station and then bought a television station in Austin, Texas. And reportedly, he got favorable rulings from the SEC. So If he had a conflict of interest, and I don't know how much you could quantify the value he got from that. But I can tell you- So conflict of interest, but also profit, right?
But it- Couldn't have been that much.
It was nothing.
We can go back farther to the 1920s with President Warren G. Harding. Remember him?
President Harding owned early on a small newspaper, and And when he became President, he and his wife owned it. He turned it over to his wife, and again, he would have profited.
So I guess you could make the argument that maybe certain companies were placing ads in that newspaper to maybe try to curry favor with the war in G Harding, right? That could have been... Sure. Was that a concern that people were throwing around in the 1920s?
I'm old, but I wasn't there. That's not what I meant, Fred. But they had conflicts of interest.
Tell us about that time, Fred. No, I'm just kidding.
I have no idea. You have no idea. But they were conflicts of interest. Certainly, when Johnson became vice president, it was reported that his aides urgent him to sell the TV station, but the family did not.
I mean, so I guess you could make the argument that, well, this is a guy who owned a TV station and radio station, or with Harding, this is a guy who owned a newspaper. And then they became President. And it's not their fault that they used to own a business. They didn't sell the business during the presidency. That's like what's happening with Trump, except, right?
Yeah. No, it's not like what's happening in Trump.
Well, it's not like what's happening with Trump.
Let me give you an example.
There's more money on the line.
Trump has made billions, he and his family, in cryptocurrency. At the same time, he is controlling the policy of the United States on cryptocurrency. And his policies are totally favorable to cryptocurrency.
Yeah, you could make this argument for Trump's first presidency. Like, he was a businessman before. What is he supposed to do? Sell all of his businesses? He'd probably get criticism for that, too. Like, maybe somebody pays generously to buy a Trump business to get in good with the incoming president. But for the second term, Fred says Trump is currently setting policies that benefit his and his family's businesses and grow their profits. And that is different.
Fred says it is not something that a US President has done before.
Okay, what about other countries? What other President is he like in another country?
Well, the leading example of this is Mr. Putin.
I think that might strike people a certain way.
No, you asked me about foreign countries. Putin is probably the leading head official of a country.
In terms of wealth?
In terms of potential wealth. People can't to figure out how much he has put away while being President, but estimates range from $20 billion to hundreds of billions of dollars.
So there's Vladimir Putin, President of Russia, and a few others.
You have dictatorhips all over the world where the leaders make sure that they become very wealthy in their job. It just has never existed like this in our country until now.
David Kirkpatrick, who has done all the accounting on just how much Trump and his family have profited, he's not done. He's still keeping track, and we'll keep updating the number.
When we spoke to him four months after his magazine article came out, that number had already gone up by about half a billion dollars.
That was host Sara Gonzales and Mary Childs of NPR's Planet Money. This episode of The Sunday Story was produced by Andrew Mambo. The original Planet Money episode was produced by James Sneed. It was edited by Jess Jean and fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Robert Rodriguez engineered it. The executive producer of Planet Money is Alex Goldmark. The Sunday Story team also includes Justine Yann, Jenny Schmidt, and Liana Simstrom. Our executive producer is Irene Naguchi. I'm Ayesha Rosco. Up first, we'll be back tomorrow with all the news you need to start your week. Until then, have a great rest of your weekend.
No, that's the problem. My phone is ringing.
Oh, your phone went off. Hold on. Okay.
I'm doing an interview at NPR. Call you back.
Was that Linda? Yes. It was? You should have put her on the phone real fast.
Well, I'll send her your regards, even though she doesn't know you.
As it should be when you're a superstar.
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Before President Donald Trump’s first term, he was in a “tight spot” financially, according to New Yorker writer David Kirkpatrick. At the start of his second term, Kirkpatrick says, Trump was in an “even tighter” spot. But six months later, Trump’s financial situation had substantially improved.Kirkpatrick has done a full accounting of the money, that’s flowed into the Trump family coffers. Kirkpatrick says even using the most conservative estimates, the Trumps have made almost $4 billion dollars “off of the presidency,” in just about a year.Today on The Sunday Story, we turn to our friends at NPR’s Planet Money to help us understand how President Trump and his family have found ways to profit from the presidency.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy