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Norms Impact

How Pam Bondi Will Get Round Constitution to Give Trump a Free Flying Palace

A foreign monarchy’s $400 million jet is being laundered through the Air Force into a sitting president’s library foundation—sidestepping Congress and hollowing out the Constitution’s foreign-gift safeguard.

Executive

May 12, 2025

Sources

Summary

Attorney General Pam Bondi authorized President Donald Trump to accept a $400 million Boeing 747-8 from Qatar under a structure routing the aircraft through the U.S. Air Force and then to Trump’s presidential library foundation. The executive branch is asserting it can avoid the Constitution’s foreign-gifts constraint by reclassifying a personal benefit as a government asset and later a private foundation transfer without congressional consent. The practical consequence is a template for foreign powers to deliver high-value benefits to a sitting president while taxpayers fund the logistics and conversion.

Reality Check

This is a blueprint for converting foreign state wealth into personal presidential benefit while using federal machinery to sanitize and subsidize the transfer, weakening our constitutional firewall against foreign influence. The conduct raises serious constitutional and ethics concerns under the Foreign Emoluments Clause’s requirement of congressional consent for gifts from foreign states, and it tests whether officials can evade that limit by routing value through the U.S. Air Force and then into a private foundation. On the criminal side, the asserted “no official act” theory is not a safe harbor: bribery and gratuities risks under 18 U.S.C. § 201, and potential honest-services fraud exposure under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, 1346, turn on intent and benefit, not just how the paperwork is staged. Even if prosecutors never charge it, normalizing this workaround invites future presidents to monetize foreign favor while taxpayers pay the conversion costs—and that corrodes equal citizenship into pay-to-play access.

Detail

<p>Attorney General Pam Bondi approved a plan for President Donald Trump to accept a Boeing 747-8 from the Qatar royal family, described as a $400 million gift, ahead of Trump’s Middle East trip where he is expected to visit Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar. Sources told ABC News that Trump will use the aircraft until near the end of his presidency.</p><p>Sources said Bondi and White House lawyer David Warrington concluded the arrangement is “legally permissible” by having the plane transferred first to the United States Air Force, modified to presidential standards, and then transferred again to the Trump Presidential Library Foundation by Jan. 1, 2029. Bondi provided a legal memorandum to the White House counsel’s office last week after Warrington asked about the legality of the Pentagon accepting the plane.</p><p>The Wall Street Journal reported L3Harris has been commissioned to overhaul the aircraft. Sources said the U.S. Air Force will pay all costs related to the transfers.</p>