The Atlantic

Corruption Unbound

Donald Trump and his cronies left his first administration with a playbook for self-enrichment in a second term.
Viktor Orbán and Donald Trump in the Oval Office in 2019
Source: Mark Wilson / Getty

Editor’s Note: This article is part of “If Trump Wins,” a project considering what Donald Trump might do if reelected in 2024.

In the annals of government ethics, the year 2017 exists in a bygone era. That September, Donald Trump’s secretary of health and human services, Tom Price, resigned in disgrace. His unforgivable sin was chartering private jets funded by taxpayers, when he just as easily could have flown commercial. Compared with the abuses of power in the years that followed, the transgression was relatively picayune. But at that early moment, even Trump felt obliged to join the criticism of Price.

During Trump’s first months as president, it wasn’t yet clear how much concentrated corruption the nation, or his own party, would tolerate, which is why Trump was compelled to . Yet nearly everything about Trump’s history in real estate, where he greased palms and bullied officials, suggested that he

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