Top Senate Dem slams GSA for OK'ing Trump hotel lease

The GSA said Trump was not in violation

“Today, GSA provided a bipartisan staff briefing to my staff and staff of the chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee in an effort to address these concerns. They failed,” Carper said in a written statement.

In response to inquiries from Carper and assertions from other critics that Trump violated the lease upon his inauguration, the GSA released a letter last week asserting that the Trump Old Post Office, LLC, as the “tenant” is officially known, is in “full compliance” with that section of the lease.

According to the letter which also included a timeline of the arrangement, the GSA announced the Trump Organization as the “preferred selected developer” on Feb. 7, 2012, more than three years before the businessman announced his presidential run. The lease was executed on Aug. 5, 2013.

The General Services Agency manages government buildings and leases and manages commercial real estate owned by the federal government.

During Friday’s briefing, Carper said the GSA could not define the word “benefit,” which he said calls into question how the agency could determine that Trump was deriving “no benefit” from the lease.

“Based on the agency’s apparent lack of expertise or thoughtfulness on this issue, I am extremely concerned about its ability to manage the lease,” he said.

He also said he was “disturbed” by the officials’ assertions, during the briefing, that the Trump administration has changed longstanding GSA practice to provide documents to both the majority and minority committee staff, and that now the GSA only has to provide documents to the committee chairman.

“The Trump Administration’s refusal to provide transparent and complete responses to elected officials in both parties who are equally responsible for oversight of the executive branch raises questions about just what GSA is trying to hide,” he said.

The GSA did not respond to a request for comment.