German foreign minister goes beyond other US allies to decry 'nepotism' of Ivanka Trump role

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by Mynameis__--__
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German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel has become the most prominent foreign leader to criticise Ivanka Trump’s role in her father's administration, culminating in her visit to Berlin as part of the W20 summit on women’s empowerment.

Speaking to the German media group Funke, Mr Gabriel described Ivanka’s advisory role to President Donald Trump, her father, as “nepotism”, The Local reports.

He said: "For me there are things that remain strange, like for example the visit of his daughter to Germany which was treated almost like a world event, while the mix of politics with family and business reminds us instead of nepotism and would be unimaginable here."

Ivanka Trump is "rather unfamiliar" with her role as first daughter and adviser

This isn't the first time Ms Trump has faced accusations of nepotism. In March, Norman Eisen, the chief ethics counsel for Barack Obama, told CNN that her appointment as adviser to the President was a “violation” of nepotism laws. This “generally prohibits a federal official, including a Member of Congress, from appointing, promoting, or recommending for appointment or promotion any ‘relative’ of the official to any agency or department over which the official exercises authority or control”.

Jason Miller, the chief spokesperson for Mr Trump's presidential campaign, previously defended Ms Trump by saying that it isn't nepotism because her role is on a voluntary, non-paid basis.

Critics would say she is still receiving benefits paid for by the US taxpayer, however. Ms Trump already has her own West Wing Office, as well as security clearance and a government-issued phone.

prollyjustsomeweirdo on May 1st, 2017 at 09:44 UTC »

As many others pointed out: It is INDEED his place to say it. Germany is a free country, and he is allowed to say whatever he likes. Ivanka is now free to respond however she likes, or ignore it. And since she and Merkel are now besties (Foreign Minister Gabriel is not in Merkel's Party, both of them are often at odds and have different opinions) I'm sure Merkel already told her to just ignore him.

afisher123 on May 1st, 2017 at 09:41 UTC »

It is astounding that some see no problem with a democratic nation filling up their administration with family members. Have these people never read a history book about how that chapter ends?

A corrupt regime leading what was once the nation that was supposedly impervious to such behavior. The people in the US who support this nonsense apparently forgot why this country was actually born.

saucissor on May 1st, 2017 at 07:32 UTC »

To everyone saying it isn't his place: that might be true, but maybe you should focus instead on why isn't anyone else saying it, someone whose place it is.

edit. embarrassing spelling error.