BCN-15 Ivanka Trump hit by ethics watchdog over China trademarks

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BCN-15

CHINA-US-TRADE-TRUMP

Ivanka Trump hit by ethics watchdog over China trademarks

NEW YORK, Nov 7, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – US first daughter and presidential
advisor Ivanka Trump is facing ethics questions after she was granted Chinese
trademark approvals for her brands in the midst of a trade war her father is
leading against Beijing.

Ivanka Trump Marks LLC received preliminary approval for 16 new trademarks
in October, according to Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in
Washington, which on Monday released documents about the issue and said the
approvals raised questions.

Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, both serve as advisors to
President Donald Trump, and it is not the first time concerns over the
potential conflict of interest with her business have been raised.

Trump also has faced criticism for failing to divest fully from his
business.

“Since she has retained her foreign trademarks, the public will continue
to have to ask whether President Trump has made foreign policy decisions in
the interest of his and his family’s businesses,” said Caroline Zhang, social
media manager for the nonprofit group. Zhang said.

The trademarks cover such goods as handbags, umbrellas, shower caps and
swimsuits, according to the documents.

The trademarks were filed in 2016 prior to Trump’s election win and “well
before” Ivanka Trump joined the administration, said Peter Mirijanian, a
spokesperson for Abbe Lowell, Ivanka Trump’s ethics attorney.

“These trademarks were sought to broadly protect Ms. Trump’s name, and to
prevent others from stealing her name and using it to sell their products,”
he said, calling it “a common trademark practice.”

However, the time of Beijing’s decision to grant the trademarks raise
questions: Trump has imposed steep punitive tariffs on more than $250 billion
in Chinese imports, and the rates are set to rise January 1.

President Trump has adopted a Jekyll and Hyde approach to trade relations
with Beijing, at times harshly criticizing China for taking advantage of the
US and at others speaking warmly of his friendly relationship with Chinese
leader Xi Jinping.

Ethics watchdogs have repeatedly criticized Trump over his continued
connections to his personal business interests.

Just last week, a US judge in Maryland rejected an attempt by Trump to
halt discovery in a case over whether Trump’s interest in the Trump
International Hotels Washington hotel violates the US Constitution emoluments
clause, which restricts payments to officials from foreign or state
governments.

BSS/AFP/HR/0948