Monetizing office

Monetizing office is the systematic generation of private revenue from the trappings of office — official appearances, brand use, media access, post-office speaking opportunities arranged from within the role, family-business windfalls timed to official action. The publication tracks documented patterns in which official position is being used as a marketing or revenue platform, distinguishing this from ordinary post-government employment, which raises a separate set of questions about revolving-door practice.

Documented entries (11)

2026

White House hosts UFC 'Freedom 250' with fighter bonuses paid in Trump-family crypto

President Trump hosted a UFC mixed-martial-arts card, "Freedom 250," on the White House South Lawn on June 14, 2026, his 80th birthday. World Liberty Financial — a crypto venture of the Trump family, which reportedly receives roughly 75% of net token proceeds — served as presenting partner of the event's fighter bonus pool, adding about $250,000 in "Performance of the Night" bonuses paid in its own USD1 stablecoin. The Trump Organization separately marketed commemorative coins tied to the event.

Reliance invested over $100 million in a Texas refinery secretly backed by Donald Trump Jr.

ProPublica reported that Reliance Industries, the energy conglomerate of Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani, invested at least $100 million in America First Refining, an obscure Texas startup secretly backed by Donald Trump Jr. The investment followed months of Trump-administration tariff pressure on the Ambani empire and coincided with major U.S. policy wins for Reliance, including a February trade deal that lowered tariffs and a license to buy Venezuelan oil. The startup's representatives reportedly told foreign officials that investing would open doors at the White House.

Trump publicly backs Kalshi and Polymarket, where son Donald Trump Jr. is a paid adviser, as his administration sues states to block their regulation

On May 27, 2026, President Trump declared on Truth Social that prediction-market firms Kalshi and Polymarket "will thrive" under his leadership and that the federal government is "setting the rules of the road" as the "gold standard for the States," while his administration actively backs the companies against state regulators. The CFTC and Department of Justice have sued Connecticut, Arizona and Illinois — and contested Minnesota's first-in-the-nation ban — to block states from regulating the operators as gambling. Donald Trump Jr. is a paid strategic adviser to both firms and his venture firm 1789 Capital is a major Polymarket investor, so the favorable federal posture directly benefits the president's family.

Pentagon awards Dell ~$9.7B software contract weeks after Trump bought Dell stock and publicly promoted the company

On May 27, 2026, the U.S. Department of Defense announced a five-year, roughly $9.7 billion blanket purchase agreement with Dell for Microsoft enterprise software and cloud services, consolidating dozens of separate contracts. The award came after President Donald Trump's portfolio acquired between $1 million and $5 million in Dell stock in early February 2026 (with smaller follow-on purchases in March, per his ethics disclosure) and after he repeatedly praised Dell and urged supporters to buy its products. Government-ethics specialists said the deal created the appearance of a conflict of interest, though under current rules it is not an ethics violation.

OGE Q1 2026 disclosures: President Trump conducted $220M–$750M in securities transactions while in office, including trades in companies — Nvidia, defense contractors, Intel — directly affected by his own administration's decisions

On May 14, 2026, the U.S. Office of Government Ethics released two financial-disclosure forms covering President Donald Trump's first three months of his second term. The filings show more than 3,700 individual securities transactions in major U.S. corporate equities — including Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Oracle, Broadcom, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Nvidia, Apple, and Amazon — with a cumulative dollar range of $220 million to $750 million. The president is simultaneously the chief executive whose administration regulates, contracts with, sues, prosecutes, and sets trade policy affecting many of the same companies. Subsequent Associated Press reporting on May 19, 2026 identified specific positions whose value was directly affected by the president's own decisions — among them Nvidia, after he approved its advanced-chip sales to China; major U.S. defense contractors, amid the Iran war; and Intel, after the federal government took a 10% equity stake. The OGE disclosure form by design reports values only in broad ranges, with no execution date, direction (purchase/sale of equivalent securities can both appear separately), price, profit, or counterparty information.

Transportation Secretary Duffy appeared in a reality series funded by DOT-regulated companies

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, his wife Rachel Campos-Duffy, and their nine children are the on-camera centerpiece of a five-part reality series, "The Great American Road Trip," produced at no personal cost to the family by a nonprofit, The Great American Road Trip Inc. The nonprofit's sponsors are dominated by companies the Department of Transportation regulates — including Boeing, Toyota, United Airlines, Shell, and Royal Caribbean — and a pitch deck reported by Politico offered higher-paying sponsors on-screen logo placement and speaking roles. The watchdog group CREW asked the DOT Inspector General to investigate possible gift- and travel-rule violations, and Senate Democrats pressed Duffy on the arrangement at a May 19, 2026 Appropriations subcommittee hearing.

Pentagon awards $24M humanoid-robot contract to Foundation Future Industries, where Eric Trump is chief strategy adviser

The U.S. Department of Defense awarded approximately $24 million in research contracts (across the U.S. Army, Navy, and Air Force) to Foundation Future Industries, a San Francisco robotics startup whose chief strategy adviser is Eric Trump, son of sitting President Donald Trump. On April 23, 2026, Eric Trump appeared on Fox Business's "Mornings with Maria" alongside Foundation CEO Sankaet Pathak to publicly tout the deal, and Democracy Now! reported on his promotion of it the following day. The contracts fund testing of the company's "Phantom" humanoid robots for military applications, with two Phantom MK-1 units sent to Ukraine in February 2026 for logistics and reconnaissance testing.

Trump Organization files 'Trump 250' trademark applications tied to U.S. 250th anniversary

On March 6, 2026, DTTM Operations LLC — the entity that manages President Donald Trump's trademarks — filed five federal trademark applications for "Trump 250," covering merchandise such as clothing, drinkware, tote bags, stickers, and golf balls. The intent-to-use filings, tied to the nation's taxpayer-funded 250th-anniversary commemoration, would let the president's family business sell or license branded products around the milestone. Government-ethics observers questioned whether the sitting president is positioning his private company to profit from an official national event.

2025

White House steered a record $620M Pentagon loan to a rare-earth firm tied to Donald Trump Jr.

White House senior counselor Peter Navarro personally asked the Pentagon's Office of Strategic Capital to approve a $620 million loan to Vulcan Elements, a North Carolina rare-earth-magnet startup — the only one of dozens of companies under consideration whose deal was initiated by a top White House aide. Donald Trump Jr.'s venture-capital firm had taken an undisclosed stake in Vulcan about three months before the deal was announced, and the company's valuation rose roughly tenfold afterward. The White House role was revealed by a ProPublica investigation published May 28, 2026.

Trump demanded DOJ pay him $230 million in compensation for federal investigations; claim routed to his former defense attorney

On October 22, 2025, President Donald Trump formally demanded that the Department of Justice pay him approximately $230 million through an administrative claims process, citing federal investigations including the Russia probe and the classified documents case. The claim required approval from DOJ officials, including Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who previously served as Trump's personal defense attorney in the classified documents prosecution. Representatives Jamie Raskin and Robert Garcia announced an investigation into the demand over self-dealing concerns.

Trump announced 2026 G20 summit at his Doral resort, directing foreign-government spending to his own property

President Trump announced on September 5, 2025, that the United States would host the 2026 G20 summit at his Trump National Doral Miami resort in Doral, Florida. The White House claimed the venue would host the event "at-cost" with no profit to Trump, but even at-cost hosting generates substantial indirect value — global media exposure, advance security expenditures, and ancillary bookings — for a property Trump personally owns. Trump abandoned an identical proposal to host the G7 at Doral in 2019 following bipartisan congressional criticism; he is now proceeding without seeking congressional consent as required by the Foreign Emoluments Clause.