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Who Makes Money When a Bunch of Conspiracy Theorists Throw a Party at Trump’s Hotel?

The American Priority Conference at the Trump National Doral Miami last month was filled with pro-Trump conspiracies.


This month, about a thousand supporters of President Donald Trump gathered at his resort in Florida to discuss a variety of unsupported theories. There were panels on the “Russia Hoax” and “Voter Fraud in the USA.” One speaker endorsed the theory that former President Barack Obama had planned to “turn over” North Africa to al-Qaida.

The American Priority Conference and Festival at the Trump National Doral Miami drew national attention for a video shown that depicted a fake Trump shooting and stabbing members of the media. And as ProPublica and WNYC detailed, speakers also told conference-goers to prepare for “war” and invoked other violent imagery. (The conference organizers said they oppose all political violence.)

Alice Wilder of “Trump, Inc.” was there during it all. (Listen to the episode.) And we explored who profited from the three-day event.

Here is what we know about who got paid.

1. Trump: The President Won’t Say How Much He Made
Neither conference organizers nor the Trump Organization would say how much the festival paid to rent the Donald J. Trump Grand Ballroom and adjacent event rooms over the three days. Disclosures by the Republican National Committee and Republican Governors Association show they each spent about $400,000 for multi-day events at the resort.

Also, many of the thousand attendees stayed at the Trump Doral. Neither the conference organizers nor the Trump Organization would say how many. Those who did stay there paid $199 per night.

2. Donald Trump Jr.: He Won’t Say if He Got Paid, but He Made $50,000 for Speaking the Night Before
Donald J. Trump Jr. was the conference’s headline speaker. During his speech, he alleged that Instagram suppressed the prominence of his profile. “I typed in my handle. Like my full handle, ‘Donald J. Trump Jr.’ I came up on Page 6,” he said. “It’s not an error.” (We searched his name. It’s the first result.)

Trump Jr. did not answer our questions about any pay he received for speaking. The night before, he addressed an audience at the University of Florida with his girlfriend, Kimberly Guilfoyle. They were paid $50,000.

3. Corey Lewandowski, Pizzagate and QAnon:
Another speaker was former Trump campaign manager and possible Senate candidate Corey Lewandowski. It was Lewandowski who endorsed the idea that Obama planned to hand over North Africa to al-Qaida. Lewandowski did not respond to our questions.

Other speakers included a leading proponent of the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, which falsely alleged that top Democrats are involved with child sex trafficking, and one who helped spread the QAnon conspiracy theory, which posits that a ring of pedophiles controls the deep state and Hollywood and the media and that only Trump can stop it. Other conference speakers told us they were given free attendance and rooms at the Doral.

4. The Conference Organizers, Who Said It Was a “Half-Million Dollar Event”…
The conference was organized by American Priority, a for-profit company that describes itself as supporting free speech and free association. The company charged $250 for general admission and said about 1,000 people registered. The conference also sold entry to VIP events, such as photo ops with Trump Jr.

The head of American Priority, Alex Phillips, declined to say exactly what the company took in. But he did give an estimate of how much the conference cost. “This is pretty much a half a million-dollar event,” Phillips said. “Our next one probably will be a million-dollar event.”

Phillips also said he would have the conference at the president’s hotel again: “The only thing that would keep us from coming here again is if our attendance projections got higher than they can handle.”

5. The Nonprofits
The conference hosted golfing and poker events for two charities: The WalkAway Campaign and the American King Foundation. The WalkAway Campaign aims to convert Democrats to the Republican Party. The American King Foundation is a pro-Trump nonprofit that supports job training for former inmates. Phillips said that the conference will announce the amount raised for charity “in the next several weeks.”

And then a new (profitable) meme was born…
During Trump Jr.’s speech, he repeatedly raised the idea that Hunter Biden — former Vice President Joe Biden’s son — is missing. “Where’s Hunter? Where’s Hunter?” people in the audience yelled. That phrase later took off outside the conference, amplified by the president himself, who tweeted it.

“Where’s Hunter?” T-shirts are now available on Trump’s reelection site. They are $25 each.

And don’t forget the Private Prison Company That GaveMoney…
One of the event’s sponsors was the GEO Group, a private prison company that the government uses to house immigrant detainees. A GEO Group spokesman said the company sponsored the conference by donating $25,000 to the American King Foundation.

It’s not the first time at the Doral for the GEO Group. The company also held its annual leadership conference there in 2017.
 

Trump Considering Legal Loophole To Install Right-Winger At DHS


The Trump administration is considering yet another tricky legal maneuver to install a far-right Trump ally as the leader of the Department of Homeland Security, according to multiple reports.

The plan involves weapons of mass destruction — or, rather, the office responsible for countering them.

The President has searched for weeks for a replacement, apparently without success, for the outgoing acting DHS secretary Kevin McAleenan. After Trump tweeted on Oct. 11 that McAleenan would resign, the President said he would announce a replacement “next week.”



The self-imposed deadline came and went.

Here’s why, according to multiple reports: Trump’s reported top picks for the job actually aren’t legally eligible. Ken Cuccinelli and Mark Morgan, the acting leaders U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, respectively, don’t fit the legal standard necessary to fill in at DHS.

That’s because the law governing such federal substitutes — the Federal Vacancies Reform Act (FVRA) — lays out three specific categories of people who can fill in when agency leaders leave their posts: the “first assistant” at the agency, other officials at the agency who’ve been confirmed by the Senate, and others who’ve been at the agency at least 90 days in the year before the vacancy occurred.

While both Cuccinelli and Morgan have held their posts for 90 days, they didn’t serve that time before the vacancy occurred — that is, the vacancy of the actual Senate-confirmed DHS secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, who resigned in April. Because McAleenan has only filled in for Nielsen on an “acting,” temporary basis, Cuccinelli and Morgan’s service during his tenure doesn’t count in the eyes of the vacancies law.

Thus, the legal work-around. The New York Times, CNN and Politico have reported, citing unnamed sources, that the White House is eyeing a vacant post at the DHS office for Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction to get Morgan or Cuccinelli to the top of DHS proper.

That WMD office currently lacks a permanent assistant secretary. The role is categorized as an “inferior officer,” according to the Times, and thus may be appointed directly by the President. From there, presumably, either Morgan or Cuccinelli would be picked as yet another “acting” DHS secretary.

Notably, Cuccinelli is quite unpopular with even some Republican senators. A handful warned Trump on Wednesday, on the record, not to pursue Cuccinelli for the top DHS job.

But it wouldn’t be the administration’s first attempt to maneuver within and around the FVRA requirements.

McAleenan himself only rose to become acting DHS secretary after the person who was going to fill that role was forced to resign, clearing the way for Trump’s pick. And when bipartisan opposition to Cuccinelli put his prospects of leading USCIS in danger, Trump created an entirely new “first assistant” role and gave it to the right-winger. Cuccinelli’s first day filling in atop the agency was also his first ever day in federal government.
 
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