Trump's new right-hand man has history of controversial clients and deals
Trump's new right-hand man has history of controversial clients and deals
Paul Manaforts track record may create new headaches for a campaign that has been criticized for weak foreign policy credentials and controversial stances
Peter Stone
Wednesday 27 April 2016 14.21 EDT
For almost four decades, Donald Trumps newly installed senior campaign adviser, Paul Manafort, has managed to juggle two different worlds: well-known during US election season as a shrewd and tough political operative, he also boasts a hefty résumé as a consultant to or lobbyist for controversial foreign leaders and oligarchs with unsavory reputations.
The controversial clients Manafort has represented have paid him and his firms millions of dollars and form a whos who of authoritarian leaders and scandal-plagued businessmen in Ukraine, Russia, the Philippines and more. On some occasions, Manafort has become involved in business deals that have sparked litigation and allegations of impropriety.
In 1985, Manafort and his first lobbying firm, Black Manafort Stone & Kelly, signed a $1m contract with a Philippine business group to promote dictator Ferdinand Marcos just a few months before his regime was overthrown and he fled the country.
In the mid-1990s, Manafort reportedly received almost $90,000 from a Lebanese-born businessman and arms merchant to advise French presidential candidate and then prime minister Edouard Balladur, a controversial payment that surfaced as part of a long running French investigation dubbed the Karachi affair into allegations that funds, including those Manafort received, came from an arms sale of French submarines to Pakistan and were illegally funneled into the French presidential campaign.
More:
http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/apr/27/paul-manafort-donald-trump-campaign-past-clients