Category: General News

  • Newswire : Newbern, AL, first Black mayor, who had been locked out of office, wins re-election

    Mayor Patrick Braxton of Newbern

    By The Associated Press


    NEWBERN, Ala. — The first Black mayor of a tiny Alabama town overwhelmingly won election this week, four years after white residents locked him out of the town hall and refused to let him serve.
    Incumbent Mayor Patrick Braxton was elected as the mayor of Newbern, winning 66 votes to his opponent’s 26, according to results posted by the town. His victory puts a punctuation mark in the dispute over control of the town government that drew national attention.
    “The people came out and spoke and voted. Now, there ain’t no doubt what they want for this town,” Braxton said in a telephone interview Wednesday night.
    The election Tuesday was the town’s first since at least the 1960s, held under a federal settlement. Black residents had sued, challenging what they called the town’s “hand-me-down governance” and refusal to let Braxton serve after he ran unopposed for mayor in 2020.
    Newbern’s residents number just 133 people. A library, the town hall, a mercantile and a flashing caution light anchor the downtown, about 40 miles west of Selma.
    What the town had been without is elections.
    Newbern’s mayor-council government had not been put to a vote for six decades. Instead, town officials held “hand-me-down” positions, with each mayor appointing a successor who appointed the council members, according to the lawsuit filed by Braxton and others. The result was an overwhelmingly white government in a town where Black residents outnumber white residents 2-1.
    Braxton, a volunteer firefighter, qualified in 2020 to run for the nonpartisan position of mayor, and since he was the only candidate, he became the mayor-elect without an election. He then appointed a new town council, as other mayors have done.
    But the locks were changed at the town hall, and Braxton was denied access to the town’s financial accounts. His lawsuit also alleged that outgoing council members held a secret meeting to set up a special election and “fraudulently reappointed themselves as the town council.”
    “I didn’t get a chance to serve but one year out of the five years,” said Braxton, who finally occupied the office last year after a three-year legal battle.
    Town officials had denied wrongdoing, arguing in court filings that Braxton’s claim to be mayor was “invalid.”
    The settlement agreement included a promise to hold a mayoral election in 2025.
    Braxton had one challenger this time — a white auctioneer and Realtor, Laird Cole.
    “Mayor Braxton’s election represents a turning point for Newbern, restoring democratic governance, ensuring fair representation, and reaffirming that every resident has a voice in their local government,” Madison Hollon, program manager of political campaigns for the SPLC Action Fund, said Thursday. The group endorsed Braxton in the race.
    The mayor said his lopsided victory should eliminate any “doubts people had hanging in their heads on if people want me.”
    “It feels good the second time,” Braxton said.

     

  • Newswire : Spike Lee Documentary shows the refusal to help Blacks during Hurricane Katrina

    Radar image of Hurricane Katrina and Flooded houses in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina

    News media focused on looting, not Black residents
    being denied food, water, and shelter

     

    By Blackmansstreet Today


    When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans 20 years ago on August 28, 2005, many of the city’s Black residents, especially those in the Lower 9th Ward, didn’t own cars or even know how to drive to flee the oncoming flood. The buses weren’t running. Some companies eventually sent buses, but no drivers because they were afraid of coming into the city, because all the news media reported was that looting and murders were widespread.

    Some 100,000 to 150,000 residents remained in the city to sit out the hurricane and to hope for the best, or they stayed because they had no other place to go.

    Many were left without food, safe drinking water, and shelter, but as one woman in Spike Lee’s Netflix documentary “Katrina: Come Hell and High Water” said, they were seeking help but were treated like criminals. 

    In the film, we see one Black cop holding a shotgun on men taking food from a store in circumstances where it was impossible to procure food otherwise.

    The series also points out racist language in news coverage. On the pages of national newspapers, headlines announced, “The Looting Instinct,” “Thugs Reign of Terror,” and the like.

    For the first days after the hurricane, news outlets focused on what we now know to be greatly exaggerated individual acts of crime and violence. 

    White residents stealing from grocery stores were described as “finding” food and beverages for their families, while Black residents doing the same thing were described as looters.

    Even reporter Soledad O’Brien, who covered the Katrina from start to finish, admitted she fell into the trap of calling Black people looters and comparing them with White people seeking food.

    Eddie Compass, New Orleans Chief of Police, said snipers were firing at helicopters, and Governor Kathleen Blanco repeated that there were snipers. Blanco ordered police to shoot to kill. 

    Mayor Ray Nagin fired Compass.

    Instead, we learned that people on the ground were trying to get attention so someone would rescue them. 

    They were not snipers, said General Russal L. Honore, who is the only hero in this disaster. He ordered members of the National Guard to put their “Goddamn guns down and begin helping people.”

    Hurricane Katrina killed 1,392 people, including 520 direct deaths, 341 of which were in Louisiana, according to the National Hurricane Center in 2023. Hurricane Katrina’s 175 miles per hour winds caused $320 billion in damage when the levee broke, flooding the city.

    Men and women huddled in the Superdome to escape the baking heat, while others walked the highway leading from New Orleans.

    The documentary shows Black men, women, and children floating face down in the water populated by venomous snakes and crocodiles.

    Others stood on their rooftops, holding waving towels, signaling for help. 

    President George W. Bush cut his vacation short to fly over the devastation, but he never went to New Orleans.

    He had declined to visit the impacted areas right away so as not to impede recovery efforts. But that’s not what people saw. 

    The image of the White, Republican president gazing distantly from above was a made-for-TV contrast with the images coming out of heavily Black, Democratic New Orleans. To many Americans, it was a far cry from the Bush who had triumphantly stood with firefighters in the rubble of the World Trade Center days after 9/11, the Bush who had famously said, “I can hear you.” 

    Bush faced almost immediate criticism from Democrats, but several Republicans would soon join in. “If we can’t respond faster than this to an event we saw coming across the Gulf for days, then why do we think we’re prepared to respond to a nuclear or biological attack?” former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich asked. 

    Then-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney called the federal response “embarrassing.” And a 2006 report by House Republicans would later criticize Bush’s Department of Homeland Security for inaction that resulted in a delayed evacuation of New Orleans. 

    On Sept. 2, Bush toured the Gulf Coast and signed a Congressionally approved $10 billion relief package. 

    He pledged to crack down on crime, restore power, and get supplies to the needy. He even appeared to criticize his own disaster officials, saying he was satisfied with the government’s response, but “not satisfied with all the results.” 

    That same day, Kanye West would go on TV and proclaim what many were already thinking: “George Bush doesn’t care about Black people.”

    All three parts of Katrina: Come Hell and High Water are available on Netflix.

  • Newswire : Billionaires pay lower effective tax rates than average Americans, new data show

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

     


    A new study by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) reveals that America’s wealthiest billionaires pay a lower share of their income in taxes than most workers and even less than the national average.

    The analysis, conducted by economists Akcan S. Balkir, Emmanuel Saez, Danny Yagan, and Gabriel Zucman, used administrative data from 2010 through 2020, matching Forbes’ list of the 400 richest Americans with individual, business, estate, and gift tax returns. It found that the top 0.0002 percent of households—roughly the “Forbes 400”—paid an average total effective tax rate of 24 percent from 2018 to 2020.
    That compares with 30 percent for the overall U.S. population and 45 percent for top labor income earners. The authors define the effective rate as all taxes paid relative to “economic income,” which includes labor income, business profits, and capital gains. The report concludes that billionaires “appear less taxed than the average American” when all sources of wealth are considered.

    Why the Wealthiest Pay Less

    The findings point to structural features of the U.S. tax code. C-corporations owned by billionaires distribute relatively little in dividends, which minimizes individual income tax unless the stock is sold. Pass through businesses—such as partnerships and S corporations—often report negative taxable income despite high profits, further limiting tax bills.

    The researchers found that between 2010 and 2017, billionaires’ effective tax rates averaged about 30 percent, but that fell to 24 percent in the years after Donald Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. The law slashed the federal corporate rate from 35 percent to 21 percent and expanded provisions like full expensing of investment, allowing companies to reduce taxable income even with high book profits.
    Estate and gift taxes also make little difference. Decedents in the Forbes 400 paid just 0.8 percent of their wealth in estate tax when married and 7 percent when single. Annual charitable giving by the group equaled 0.6 percent of wealth and 11 percent of economic income in 2018–2020.

    The Corporate Tax’s Outsized Role

    Corporate taxes remain a major source of government revenue from billionaires. About 9 percentage points of the top 400’s 23.8 percent effective rate comes from corporate tax. By contrast, their individual income taxes amounted to just 11 percent of economic income. When measured against wealth instead of income, the richest Americans paid only 1.3 percent of their holdings in taxes annually in 2018–2020—down from 2.7 percent in 2010–2013.

    International Comparisons

    The United States is not alone in seeing ultra-rich households taxed at lower rates. Similar studies show billionaires in the Netherlands pay less than 20 percent of economic income, while in France, the top 0.0002 percent paid 26 percent in 2016. Still, U.S. billionaires’ individual income tax rates—about 11 percent of economic income—are higher than those in parts of Europe, where personal holding companies allow greater avoidance.
    The researchers caution that the effective rate at the very top is heavily dependent on how economic income is defined, but across multiple approaches, the results remain consistent: the richest households are taxed at lower rates than most Americans. “Ultra-high-net-worth individuals appear less taxed than the average American,” the authors wrote.

     

  • Newswire : Trump terminates Kamala Harris’s Secret Service protection, but California will fill the gap.Trump is running a narcissistic vendetta


     Vice President Kamala Harris

    By Blackmansstreet Today

    President Donald Trump has dropped Secret Service protection for former Vice President Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party nominee in the 2024 election for president, quashing an 18-month extension ordered by President Joseph Joseph Biden after she left office.

    Trump however, ordered the Secret Service detail to end on September 1.He made the decision Thursday to revoke that continued protection, and an executive memorandum was issued to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem directing her to rescind Harris’s Secret Service detail, the officials said.

    The directive was then forwarded to the Secret Service, and the agency will comply with the order, the Homeland Security officials confirmed.

    In June, the U. S. Secret Service ran a threat assessment on Harris and did not find anything alarming, that would warrant extending her detail past the usual. six months, according to sources familiar with the situation. 

    “The Vice President is grateful to the United States Secret Service for their professionalism, dedication, and unwavering commitment to safety,” Kirsten Allen, a senior adviser to Harris, said in a statement to CBS News.

    Trump is seeking retribution against people he doesn’t like.

    In another recent instance, Trump has demanded that the U.S. Central Bank
    force Lisa D. Cook, and asked her to step down as a Governor of the Federal
    Reserve Board,. This was after Trump officials alleged that Cook was involved in a case of mortgage fraud. Cook has not been charged with a crime. Cook angrily told Trump she is not leaving and that he has no right to force her out of her job. She also sued Trump, her lawyer says.

    Last Friday, the FBI raided former national security advisor and frequent
    Trump critic John Bolton’s home in Bethesda, Maryland. The FBI said the raid was part of a “national security investigation in search of classified
    records,” a source familiar with the matter confirmed to NBC News.

    Trump administration has removed Secret Service protection for several others, including John Bolton, who was the president’s national security adviser during his first term, and Hunter Biden and Ashley Biden, the children of former President Joe Biden, were also denied further protective services.

    Trump has fired anyone who opposes him. The White House said on
    The Thursday that it has fired Robert Primus, a member of the Surface Transportation Board because he opposed the proposed merger of Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern railroad companies

    The California Highway Patrol will protect Harris following a meeting between Governor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass.

  • Jane Sapp, founder of Black Belt Folk Roots Festival, shares in the 50th celebration

     

    Jane Wilburn Sapp, founder of the annual Black Belt Folk Roots Festival in 1975, was in attendance, with her son Edward and his family, for the 50th Festival Celebration held in Eutaw, AL, August 23 and 24, 2025. She is accompanied on stage by Dr. Carol P. Zippert, who has continued the festival celebration since 1982. Dr. Zippert presented Ms. Sapp with a specially designed throw and pillow bearing the festival’s 50th year emblem and photos of her and her late husband Hubert Sapp at an earlier festival. The gifts were created by artist Fatima Robinson.
    Attorney Faya Rose Toure presented Ms. Sapp with a carved leaf symbolizing the festival’s beginning; Attorney Toure then presented Dr. Zippert with a carved tree symbolizing the growth and continuation of the annual Black Belt Folk Roots Festival.

     

  • Federation holds 58th Annual Meeting

    Phylicia Rashard receives award at the Federation meeting and Cornelius Blanding addresses membership at the 58th Annual Meeting.

      The Federation of Southern Cooperative/Land Assistance Fund held its 58th Annual Meeting, on the weekend of August 14-16, 2025. Over 400 people from the membership and guests registered and attended both parts of the meeting.
    The first part was the 24th annual Estelle Witherspoon Lifetime Achievement Award Dinner, held in Birmingham, to honor the legacy of the woman who served as the initial manager of the Freedom Quilting Bee and founding board member of the Federation. Phylicia Rashard, a stage and TV actress, most famous for her role as Claire Huxtable in the Cosby show, was honored with the Witherspoon Award.
    In her acceptance remarks, Rashard said she was “a person of the earth, like the Black farmers in the Federation. I remember going to visit my grandparents in Louisiana and South Carolina as a child observing them engaging with the land. This helped form the core of my artistic experience. I am a person of the earth, and I carry those experiences with me, wherever I go in life.”
    On Friday and Saturday, the meeting moved to the Federation’s Rural Training and Research Center between Epes and Gainesville in Sumter County. The same large crowd followed the program to its rural base.
    On Fridays, there usually is a panel of USDA program officials, who explain the latest changes and developments in Federal small agriculture programs, however this year the Trump Administration is still deliberating over whether the Federation’s mission of ‘cooperative development, upholding Black land ownership and advocacy for public policies benefiting small farmers and rural
    communities’ is in compliance with the President’s Executive Order banning Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.
    In place of the USDA panels, the Federation had a panel on its own program initiatives and workshops on heirs property, forestry an agroforestry, as well as cooperative development
    The Federation’s Memorial Legacy Committee made a presentation on its plans and the development of a master plan for the Memorial Legacy Park, a living memorial of nature trails, gardens, orchards, outdoor classrooms, a remembrance wall, gazebos and other places for small groups to gather, cabins, fishing piers and other places for people to meet, learn, relax, renew and rejuvenate. The Committee suggested ways the membership could participate and support the project.
    On Saturday, there was a Prayer Breakfast featuring Rev. Wendell Paris of Jackson, Mississippi as the spiritual speaker and a best hat contest, honoring the late Mattie Mack, Kentucky Board Member, who always wore special decorative hats to the Federation’s Annual Meeting and Prayer Breakfast.
    At the annual Federation membership business meeting, Shirley Blakely, Chairperson gave some comments and Carrie Fulghum, Treasurer gave some financial data. Blakely introduced and praised Executive Director, Cornelius Blanding, who gave a more detailed report on the work of the Federation.
    In his report, Blanding said the Federation had grown to have $14.5 million in assets and had substantially reduced debts, despite loosing over $17.5 in Federal contracts because of USDA concerns about ‘diversity, equity and inclusion’ in Federal contracts. He said, “We are working to assure every farmer gets an official USDA farm number, to enable them to access USDA programs. We want each farm family to have a feasible farm plan and every co-op to have a business plan built from those farm plans. Every landowner, we work with to have an estate plan and a plan to work out any heir’s property problems that they may have,
    Blanding concluded by saying, “The Federation shows the extraordinary things that ordinary people can do – when they work together cooperatively.”
    For more information on the vision, work and programs of the Federation, contact their website at: http://www.federation.coop.

  • County hires Altheria Wilder as CFO

    Commission approves structure for Greenethumb Farmer’s Initiative Improvement District, producing Medical Marijuana; approves lease adjustment with Iron Wolf, LLC

    The Greene County Commission met in a called meeting, Monday, August 25, 2025 with all Commissioners present. Following the official opening, Attorney Mark Parnell certified the body going into executive session for legal matters and personnel issues. When the public meeting resumed, the Chairperson, Garria Spencer, stated that no decisions were made in executive session.
    The first item discussed was a request from Greenethumb Farmer’s Initiative Improvement District. Reportedly, Greenethumb is licensed to grow Medical Marijuana at the site off Hwy11in Greene County. Attorney Parnell clarified that a decision on the Articles of Incorporation of the group was before the Commission. He said there is no financial obligation for the county, but establishing the Articles will enable the group to secure bonds. The Commission voted unanimously to approve the Articles, with the understanding that the Commission also has the authority to appoint five board members for the Improvement District. Commissioner Spencer stated the county will address this at the next meeting.
    The next pertinent item before the Commission was consideration of a request from Iron Wolf, LLC to amend their lease agreement with the County. The request was to extend the lease to five years, with the initial two years payment applied to renovations and repairs, after which time the lease payment will be $125,000 annually. The Commission indicated there may be future lease negotiations, pending gaming law changes in Alabama.
    The Commission also hired Mrs. Altheria Wilder in the position of CFO for the County. Her employment is part-time, involving three days per week at $45 per hour. Mrs. Wilder has served in the capacity of County CFO previously and is relatively familiar with the county’s financial operations.
    In other business the Commission acted on the following:

    • Approved M&H Construction for painting the courthouse.
    • Approved Barton Enterprises for polishing floors at the courthouse.
    • Approved tree removal behind courthouse.
    • Requested verification of cost for the modification of the truck for the Coroner’s operations. Purchase of the truck has been approved.
    • Approved agreement with Text my gov.
  • Corey Cockrell elected new Mayor of Eutaw Jonathan Woodruff (D-2), Carrie Logan (D-5),Tracie Hunter (D-3) elected to City Council

    In the August 26, 2025, Eutaw Municipal Election, Corey Cockrell ( 508 votes – 51.6%) defeated incumbent Mayor Latasha Johnson (411 votes – 41.8%), Tyrone Atkins (64 votes – 6.5%) also ran. A total of 983 votes were cast in the mayor’s race.
    These results are unofficial and subject to change based on the final certification of votes on September 2nd by the Voting Managers and Board of Registrars. There were some provisional ballots cast which must be checked against registration lists to determine if they will be counted. In two council races, where the vote count is very close, these provisional ballots may affect the results.
    In the District 1 Council race, incumbent Valarie Watkins received 94 votes to KeUndra Cox with 93 votes. Watkins is leading by one vote, so this race is too close to call, until after any provisional ballots are counted and the winner is certified by the Election Managers on September 2nd.
    In District 2, incumbent Jonathan Woodruff Jr. was re-elected with 123 votes, with challengers Charles Naylor receiving 35 votes and Quentin M. Walton 43 votes.
    In District 3, Tracie Hunter was re-elected because she was unopposed by any other candidate in this election.
    In District 4, Lorenzo French leads the field with 83 votes to Sarah Duncan Brewer with 47 and incumbent Larrie Coleman with 37. Lorenzo French is a few votes short of the required 50% plus 1 vote, and will face a run-off with Sarah Brewer, unless the provisional ballots give him the needed majority to win.
    In District 5, challenger Carrie Logan with 123 votes, defeated incumbent Suzette Powell with 86 votes.
    About half of the registered voters in the city came out for the election. Young people, under the age of 35, played a key role in electing Corey Cockrell as mayor. He takes office on November 1, 2025, and the new City Council will be sworn in at their first meeting in November.
    Forkland and Union results
    In Forkland, Mayor Charlie McAlpine was re-elected for another term by a vote of 166 to 87 for challenger Sharon Washington. In the District 3 City Council race, Alfonso Thomas defeated Preston Davis, by a vote of 41 to 12.
    In Union, Mayor James Gaines was re-elected over challenger Loydleetta Wabbington, by a close vote of 54 to 52.
    There was no election in Boligee, since all candidates were unopposed.

  • Newswire : Administration tries to pretend slavery never happened

     Slave showing marks of whipping

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    The Trump White House has declared war on history itself. In an official article published Friday, Aug. 22, on the White House website, the administration blasted the Smithsonian Institution for telling the truth about slavery, systemic racism, and inequality in America. It was not just an attack on museums—it was an attack on memory, on facts, and on the lives of generations of Black Americans who endured the country’s greatest crimes.

    The White House mocked exhibits at the National Museum of African American History and Culture for daring to explain that America privileges whiteness. It dismissed scholarship on the legacies of slavery in the Texas Revolution, ridiculed art that reckons with the Middle Passage, and condemned programs that document systemic exclusion in immigration and housing. It went further, painting the Smithsonian as “anti-American propaganda” for highlighting the ways colonization, racism, and oppression shaped the very foundations of the nation.
    What the administration is doing is clear: it is trying to erase the trail of oppression that runs like a scar through U.S. history—from the whip on enslaved backs, to Jim Crow segregation, to the discriminatory policies that persist today.

    From Slavery to Jim Crow

    Slavery was not just an economic system—it was a regime of terror. Families were ripped apart, women were violated, men were chained, and entire generations were forced into labor that built the wealth of this nation. When emancipation finally came, Reconstruction briefly promised equality. Black men held office, built schools, and claimed rights once denied. But white supremacy roared back with violence and legal restrictions. Reconstruction collapsed, and Jim Crow rose in its place. For nearly a century, Jim Crow laws ensured Black Americans could not vote freely, attend equal schools, or live without fear of lynching. The White House’s attempt to dismiss museums for teaching about this reality is nothing less than an attempt to silence that history.

    Red-lining and the War on Drugs

    When Jim Crow ended, systemic racism mutated. The federal government backed redlining policies that locked Black families out of home ownership, while white families accumulated wealth through suburban expansion. Gentrification decades later uprooted Black communities in cities, pushing families out of neighborhoods they had called home for generations. Then came the war on drugs. Entire communities were criminalized. Harsh sentencing laws and targeted policing filled prisons with Black and brown bodies, devastating families and stripping away economic and political power. The administration now attacking the Smithsonian is the same one that celebrates law-and-order policies that continue this cycle.

    Civil Rights Gains Under Siege

    The Civil Rights Movement forced America to confront its hypocrisy. Through marches, sit-ins, and court victories, Black Americans dismantled legal segregation. But every gain came with backlash. Today, voter suppression laws, redistricting schemes, and so-called “voter integrity measures” are dressed-up attempts to return to the days when Black voices were excluded. The Smithsonian’s exhibits on democracy document this truth. The White House calls it subversive.
    Erasing History to Protect Power

    The Trump White House’s attack on the Smithsonian is not accidental. By branding the truth as “anti-American,” the administration seeks to recast America as blameless. The logic is simple: if slavery is just a footnote, if Jim Crow was just the past, if systemic racism never existed, then there is nothing to fix. There is no reason for reparations, no reason for equity, no reason to confront police violence, mass incarceration, or economic injustice. The administration even ridiculed the National Museum of African Art’s exhibit inspired by Drexciya, a myth of children born underwater from enslaved women who died in the Middle Passage. Instead of honoring the resilience behind that vision, the White House dismissed it as “fringe”.

    The Fight for Memory

    The attempt to rewrite history is part of a wider campaign. This White House has moved to criminalize protest, weaken civil rights protections, and silence Black leaders. Attacking the Smithsonian is about controlling the narrative—deciding whose story matters and whose story gets erased.
    The truth is this: America’s history is not just one of freedom and triumph. It is also one of bondage, violence, exclusion, and systemic theft of opportunity. To erase that truth is to dishonor every enslaved man, every woman denied her humanity, every family displaced by redlining, every child funneled into mass incarceration.
    The Smithsonian was created to tell America’s story in full. Today, that mission is under direct assault from a White House that has chosen denial over truth. And if the nation accepts this whitewashing, the suffering of millions will not just be forgotten—it will be erased.

  • Newswire : How Trump and his family made a Billion off the White House, in second term

    By Stacy M. Brown
    Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    Donald Trump’s second stint in the White House has proven to be a gold mine — for Donald Trump. An investigation by The New Yorker has tallied more than $1 billion in personal and family gains tied directly to his two presidencies, from foreign mega-projects to luxury perks and merchandise sales that blur, if not obliterate, the lines between public office and private profit. When Trump first took office in 2017, he assured Americans he would not “destroy the company he built” but would turn daily operations over to his sons. He claimed such a handoff would avoid the appearance of exploiting the presidency. Eight years later, that promise is in shreds.
    The New Yorker reports that Trump and his family have reaped massive windfalls, including Persian Gulf real estate and golf course contracts in Saudi Arabia, Oman, Dubai, and Qatar that would be inconceivable without the presidency. Jared Kushner’s private-equity firm, Affinity Partners, secured a $2 billion investment from Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s sovereign wealth fund, along with hundreds of millions more from the UAE and Qatar, generating hundreds of millions for Kushner personally. Mar-a-Lago’s revenues have quintupled since Trump entered politics, producing at least $125 million in extra profit from members willing to pay as much as $1 million to join.

    Trump’s personal merchandising empire — separate from his campaign store — has brought in $27.7 million selling MAGA-style hats, koozies, and flip-flops. Donor-funded PACs have spent over $100 million covering his personal legal bills. The Emir of Qatar offered him a Boeing 747-8 as a “gift” for his use after leaving office, worth an estimated $150 million. A massive Hanoi golf and hotel complex, advanced by Vietnam’s Communist Party with “special attention” from the Trump administration, is projected to bring $40 million in licensing profits.
    Major media companies — ABC, Meta, X, and CBS — have collectively paid $63 million to Trump’s presidential library foundation to settle defamation claims that legal experts described as baseless but were resolved under the weight of presidential power. Meanwhile, Trump and his family have dived into cryptocurrency, NFTs, and token sales, pocketing at least $14.4 million from licensing fees and digital currency holdings. Ethics watchdog Fred Wertheimer told The New Yorker that “when it comes to using his public office to amass personal profits, Trump is a unicorn — no one else even comes close.” The total haul stands at roughly $1.02 billion — a sum no prior occupant of the Oval Office has approached.
    “We will never really know,” Robert Weissman of Public Citizen stated.