The emoluments
clause, explained for Donald Trump
President Donald Trump is still
defending the White House’s decision to host next year’s G7 summit, a gathering
of seven world leaders, at a Miami resort owned by Trump’s business — even
though he abandoned the plan after it was
widely criticized.
At a Cabinet meeting on Monday, he
blamed the backlash against his attempt to profit from the G7 on “you people
with this phony emoluments clause,” referring to a provision of the
Constitution which prevents federal officials from being compensated by foreign
governments.
The crux of Trump’s argument is that
other presidents have conducted business while they were in the White House, so
why can’t he?
He claimed, without evidence, that
President Obama may have negotiated “a deal for a book” or “a deal with
Netflix” while still in office. (The book deal was announced in March
2017 and the Netflix deal in May 2018.) He also claimed that George
Washington “ran his business simultaneously while he was president.”
This is not a legal argument. If Washington,
Obama, or any other president violated the emoluments clause, that simply means
that they violated the emoluments clause. It does not give Trump a permission
slip to do the same.
Trump’s remarks, moreover, suggest
that he does not understand what the emoluments clause permits and what it
forbids.
Trump appears to believe that he’s
being attacked for conducting personal business while he’s also serving as
president. But the Constitution forbids something much more specific— and
Trump’s attempt to host foreign leaders at his personal resort is a pretty
clear-cut violation.
The Constitution includes a few
provisions that are sometimes described as “emoluments” clauses.
One such provision, sometimes referred to as the “foreign emoluments clause,” provides that “no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under [the United States], shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.”
One such provision, sometimes referred to as the “foreign emoluments clause,” provides that “no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under [the United States], shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.”
Another provision, which is
sometimes referred to as the “domestic emoluments clause,” provides that the
president shall receive “a Compensation” for his services, and shall not
receive “any other Emolument from the United States, or any of [the several
states].”
The meaning of the word “emolument”
is contested in litigation challenging Trump’s alleged violations of both the
foreign and the domestic clause. But most dictionaries from the era of the US’s
founding define the word broadly.
John Mikhail, a Georgetown law
professor, looked at 40 different dictionaries published between 1604 and 1804
to try to determine how the word was understood at the time of the
Constitution’s framing. He found that 37 of those 40 dictionaries give it a meaning
that “would encompass sort of the profits of ordinary market
transactions.”
Nearly all of these dictionary
definitions, according to Mikhail’s research, encompass words like “profit,”
“advantage,” or “gain.”
Thus, if a federal official owns a
resort, and they host a diplomatic summit with foreign leaders at that resort,
that would likely violate the foreign emoluments clause: If Trump hosted the G7
at his own resort, he would be earning a profit from a foreign state and its
leaders.
Similarly, even if Trump were
correct that President Obama negotiated a business transaction with a publisher
or with Netflix while in office, neither transaction would violate the
Constitution.
The foreign emoluments clause
forbids the president from profiting off foreign governments, and the domestic
emoluments clause limits the president’s ability to profit off of either the
federal government or a state government. But neither Obama’s book publisher
nor Netflix is a foreign or domestic government.
There is a reason the Constitution
singles out transactions with foreign governments as forbidden.
As Alexander Hamilton explained in the Federalist Papers,
“one of the weak sides of republics, among their numerous advantages, is that
they afford too easy an inlet to foreign corruption.”
In a monarchy, the chief executive shares an identity with the state, so a king or queen “has so great a personal interest in the government and in the external glory of the nation, that it is not easy for a foreign power to give him an equivalent for what he would sacrifice by treachery to the state.”
But in a republican state, where leaders serve temporarily and keep their finances separate from that of the nation, “persons elevated from the mass of the community, by the suffrages of their fellow-citizens, to stations of great pre-eminence and power, may find compensations for betraying their trust.”
The framers, in other words,
believed that federal officials would be uniquely vulnerable to the corrupting
influence of a foreign state. The foreign emoluments clause offers a shield
against that corruption — assuming that it is enforced.