Donald Trump has a web of international business interests with few rivals in American history, let alone presidential history, warn ethics experts getting ready to take on a Trump presidency. According to a Washington Post analysis, at least 111 Trump companies have business interests in 18 countries and territories, including China, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia, creating potential conflicts of interest all over the world. "There are so many diplomatic, political, even national security risks in having the president own a whole bunch of properties all over the world," warns Richard Painter, the chief ethics lawyer of the George W. Bush administration. A roundup of coverage:
- The Guardian reports that a coalition of watchdog groups has asked Trump to put his business holdings in a "genuine blind trust," meaning that an independent trustee would sell all his assets and put the proceeds in investments that would not be disclosed to Trump. The Trump Organization has said control of Trump's assets will be handed to his children, not an independent outsider.