The art of Trump’s deals

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Jen Kuznicki explains why if you’re looking for a reform conservative presidential candidate, it won’t be Donald Trump:

A lot has been said about so-called New York values. It was said by Donald Trump in 1999 to mean “liberal values” when it came to social issues. Today he swears it means how people came together after 9/11. The definition keeps changing to fit the times, yet looking at Trump’s past, perhaps it means “being on the take,” which may be loosely what Ted Cruz has intimated by using the phrase.

Certainly, you could describe the state’s Democrats as “being on the take,” after all, that’s what socialism is. As Margaret Thatcher used to say: “The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people’s money.” Cruz has hit the Democrats who run New York on their failed socialist utopia, but the Donald’s past is rife with screwing the taxpayer for his own benefit.

Using other people’s money is how Donald Trump got ahead; in fact, he was the subject of an LA Times report in 2011 titled, “Trump has thrived with government’s generosity.” The Times focused, as all leftists do, on the amount of money Trump short-changed the government through tax abatements and tax credits, but the article also cited the fact that he has actively sought money from the taxpayers to give himself a leg up, building that tremendous company.

Trump’s first deal in Manhattan was to transform the Hotel Commodore into a luxury hotel. He sought, and received, taxpayer money to make the renovation, and got a 40-year tax abatement to boot.

Was it stupid of the city council to approve these taxpayer funds to help Trump turn a profit? Of course; however, there is no question that Trump has been on the take for decades.

Trump asked the federal government for $200 million to augment the highway near an abandoned railroad yard, which would be the site for his new luxury hotel. Once a congresswoman secured the money, Trump would promise lower income units to qualify for yet another federally subsidized loan for his hotel. Not all of his pressure on federal monies worked, but he secured some of that and much more in the form of tax abatements from the state.

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