If nobody is corrupt, then Trump is not corrupt.View this email in your browser [link removed]
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****JUNE 11, 2025****
**On the
**Prospect **website**
Here lies regular order [link removed]
As soon as Senators tried to do their jobs to propose amendments to legislation, their colleagues didn’t like it. So that’s the end of amendments.
**BY DAVID DAYEN**
[link removed] The Escalating, Bloody Exploitation of Meat Workers Under Trump [link removed] [link removed]
Conditions in meatpacking plants are set to return to scenes from ‘The Jungle.’
**BY JACOB PLAZA**
Defending VA Veterans Health Care on D-Day [link removed]
Thousands of veterans mobilize to oppose the gutting of direct care and the move toward privatization.
**BY SUZANNE GORDON AND STEVE EARLY**
****Kuttner on TAP****
**Trump's Brotherhood of the Corrupt**
**Why the president displays an affection for the world's crooks: If nobody is corrupt, then Trump is not corrupt.**
**In February, President Donald Trump** issued an executive order suspending enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, pending a review. This week, **enforcement was partly reinstated, but drastically narrowed** [link removed]. That brought back some personal memories.
As an investigator for Wisconsin's great progressive senator, William Proxmire, in the 1970s, I was responsible for developing two pieces of landmark legislation—the Community Reinvestment Act and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. When I pass on to my reward, I'd like to be remembered for co-founding the Prospect and for my work with Sen. Proxmire on the Senate Banking Committee. It was my graduate school in political economy and the basis for my subsequent career as an economics journalist.
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act was a response to an epidemic of bribery by U.S. corporations of foreign government officials. It had become almost standard practice for American corporate executives to grease foreign palms in order to get contracts. A particularly notorious case involved Lockheed, which bribed leaders of Japan, West Germany, and other nations to sell aircraft. Lockheed even bribed Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka, resulting in his resignation when the bribes were disclosed.
Our committee conducted several days of hearings. We concluded that this pattern of corruption debased both honest capitalism and the rule of law. Even though the corrupt bargain involved offshore leaders, it should be illegal under American law.
We got a huge amount of pushback. Corporate lobbyists and their Republican allies argued that these rules would disadvantage American corporations while their foreign competitors could bribe to their hearts' content. Their lawyers also contended that the whole idea was extraterritorial—an unconstitutional attempt to have U.S. law apply abroad.
But thanks to the grotesque practices revealed by our investigation and others, as well as Proxmire's deft legislative leadership, the bill passed and was signed into law in 1977. The Supreme Court upheld its constitutionality.
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The Act has been a notable success [link removed]. About 30 enforcement actions are typically filed every year by the SEC and the Justice Department. Contrary to the contention that the Act would disadvantage U.S. corporations, the effect has been the opposite—to level the playing field.
Because the act covers all multinational corporations with operations in the U.S., the preponderance of cases, including nine out of the ten largest ones, have been brought against non-U.S. corporations. The largest fine levied against a U.S. corporation was a $2.6 billion fine against...wait for it...Goldman Sachs. The result has been to damp down corporate bribery everywhere—a rare victory for the rule of law against a rising tide of corruption.
So why would Donald Trump want to gut enforcement of this Act?
Think about it. It's in Trump's interest to define away corruption. If we just banish the idea that corruption is a problem, Trump's own pervasive corruption fades away as a public scandal.
If nobody is corrupt, then Trump is not corrupt.
Trump has an affinity for self-serving deals with dictators who don't care about such niceties as conflicts of interest. He's a candidate member of that club. And if you look at the pattern of Trump's pardons, he is attracted to excusing felons who were found guilty of all manner of corruption.
The Supreme Court, with three Trump appointees, also helped define away corruption with its 6-3 ruling in the 2024 case, Synder v. United States [link removed]. The Court held that there had to be an explicit quid pro quo for prosecutors to win a bribery conviction. “Gratuities” or campaign contributions in tacit exchange for friendly treatment were not sufficient. There had to be a smoking gun.
In dissent, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson ridiculed the majority for splitting hairs to differentiate a gratuity from a bribe. She wrote: “Officials who use their public positions for private gain threaten the integrity of our most important institutions. Greed makes governments—at every level—less responsive, less efficient, and less trustworthy from the perspective of the communities they serve.”
Law professor Zephyr Teachout's landmark book,
**Corruption in America**, reminds us that the constitutional Founders took pains not just to prevent the young Republic from deteriorating into a monarchy; they were equally concerned to prevent corruption from debasing popular sovereignty and the rule of law.
Trump is Exhibit A. Convictions under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act are awkward for Trump, because they serve as a reminder that corruption is persistent, real, and damaging to honest capitalism as well as democracy.
**~ ROBERT KUTTNER**
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