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Found 3 results

  1. Donald Trump's commerce secretary says there is "nothing improper" about his business links to Russian figures who are currently under US sanctions. Wilbur Ross was accused of misleading senators after leaked documents showed his interests in a firm in which some shareholders have ties to the Kremlin. He told the BBC that the US had not sanctioned the company, Sibur, so "there's nothing wrong with that". Mr Ross also denied he had failed to disclose the information. Earlier, Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal called the revelations of the Kremlin links "inexcusable". They come as part of a huge leak of financial documents, dubbed the Paradise Papers, revealing how the powerful and ultra-wealthy, including the Queen's private estate, secretly invest vast amounts of cash in offshore tax havens. What did Wilbur Ross do, according to the leaks? The leaks show he has investments in shipping firm Navigator Holdings, which earns millions a year transporting oil and gas for Sibur. Two major Sibur shareholders have been sanctioned by the US: Russian billionaire Gennady Timchenko, who has at least 12 companies connected to him The Russian natural gas company, Novatek, belonging to Leonid Mikhelson Another key Sibur shareholder is President Vladimir Putin's son-in-law, Kirill Shamalov, who holds a 3.9% stake in the firm. While he is not subject to sanctions, his father, Nikolai, is. Mr Ross has not disputed the revelations, telling the BBC: "There's nothing whatsoever improper about Navigator having a relationship with Sibur." "If our government decided to sanction them, that would be a different story," he continued. He said he had disclosed the business links to the office of government ethics, and denied misleading the confirmation hearing committee when he took office. He said he had never met any of the figures concerned. The US imposed some sanctions after Russia annexed Crimea in 2014. Others were imposed last year for alleged interference in the US presidential election. The commerce department earlier said Mr Ross had "been generally supportive of the administration's sanctions of Russian and other entities". What's the problem then? Prior to being confirmed in office as treasury secretary, Wilbur Ross did not reveal to Congress the full details of his company holdings. According to the leaks, he retains a financial interest in Navigator Holdings via a number of companies in the Cayman Islands, some of which he did disclose at the time of his confirmation. However, under the disclosure rules he did not have to declare his interest in Navigator Holdings. But questions will be raised about Mr Ross's potential conflicts of interest and whether his ties undermine US sanctions against Russia. "Our committee was misled, the American people were misled by the concealment of those companies," Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal told NBC News after the revelations came to light. Mr Blumenthal has called for an investigation into the treasury secretary's links to President Putin's son-in-law. The leaks come as an investigation led by special counsel Robert Mueller into Russian connections to Donald Trump's 2016 campaign team continues. Mr Trump's presidency has been dogged by allegations that Russians colluded to try to influence the outcome of the election. He has called the allegations "fake news". How close is Ross to Trump? They have known each other for more than a quarter of a century. Mr Ross played a key part in a pre-packaged bankruptcy deal - an agreement between a company and its creditors - for Mr Trump's Atlantic City casino, the Taj Mahal, in the 1990s. He stepped in to represent the angry bondholders but liked Donald Trump's style. Mr Ross, according to Trump biographer David Cay Johnston, was the key negotiator preventing Donald Trump from "being swept into the dustbin of history because he saw the value in the Trump name". "If it hadn't been for Wilbur Ross, Donald Trump would not be in the White House." How close is Ross to Navigator Holdings? WL Ross & Co, which was founded by Wilbur Ross, appears to have maintained a close relationship with the shipping company. On the night that he was nominated as commerce secretary, Mr Ross was congratulated on his promotion by the senior management of Navigator Holdings at a New York restaurant, Bloomberg reports. Mr Ross reportedly told the CEO of Navigator: "Your interest is aligned to mine. The US economy will grow, and Navigator will be a beneficiary." Another key Navigator customer has been PDVSA, the Venezuelan state oil company. It was targeted by US sanctions this year. Timeline: Wilbur Ross's links with Sibur November 2012: Navigator sign charter deal with Sibur. Mr Ross becomes Navigator board member March - November 2014: He remains a board member as the US sanctions Russia for annexing Crimea November 2014: Mr Ross leaves Navigator's board with Ross group partner Wendy Teramoto taking his place until 2017 2015: Navigator increases business with Sibur, with energy firm accounting for 9.1% of its total revenues (compared to 5.3% in 2014) 2016: Figures show Sibur remains among Navigator's top five clients, predominantly exporting Russian gas to Europe and potentially providing significant income to sanctioned Putin allies 2017: Navigator doubles the fleet it uses on Sibur exports to four What else do the Paradise Papers reveal? About £10m ($13m) of the Queen's private money was invested into offshore accounts in the Cayman Islands and Bermuda. Read more here A key aide of Canada's PM has been linked to offshore schemes that may have cost the nation millions of dollars in taxes, threatening to embarrass Justin Trudeau, who has campaigned to shut tax havens. Read more here A former UK Conservative party deputy chairman and a significant donor, Lord Ashcroft, may have ignored rules around how his offshore investments were managed. Read more here How questions were raised about the funding of a major shareholding in Everton FC. Read more here An oligarch with close links to the Kremlin, Alisher Usmanov, may have secretly taken ownership of a company responsible for anti-money laundering checks on Russian cash. Read more here What are the Paradise papers? They are a huge batch of leaked documents mostly from offshore law firm Appleby, along with corporate registries in 19 tax jurisdictions, which reveal the financial dealings of politicians, celebrities, corporate giants and business leaders. The 13.4 million records were passed to German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and then shared with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). Panorama has led research for the BBC as part of a global investigation involving nearly 100 other media organisations, including the Guardian, in 67 countries. The BBC does not know the identity of the source. I'm thinking these businessmen are going to wish they stayed out of politics B/A
  2. Republicans have unveiled details of a controversial tax plan, aimed at slashing rates for businesses and lowering inheritance taxes. The proposal would lower the corporate tax rate from 35% to 20%, while retaining the top individual rate for the wealthiest at 39.5%. But it eliminates a popular mortgage interest deduction for new home loans of $500,000 (£380,000) or more. Delivering on the plan is a priority for Republicans and the president. They say it will make US companies more competitive and filing taxes easier for the average American family. Republicans said the bill, which would amount to about $1.5tn in cuts over a decade, was transformational. "This is our chance to make sure that generations to come don't just get by, they get ahead in this country," House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan said. Republicans said the changes will save the average American family of four about $1,182 on their tax bill. But Democrats say the plan favours corporations and the wealthy. Representative Nancy Pelosi, who leads Democrats in the House, slammed the bill as "half-baked" and said it would raise taxes on middle class. President Donald Trump and other party leaders are hoping to win approval of the bill by the end of the year. Murky details By Anthony Zurcher, BBC News, Washington The Republican party's outline of its new tax plan lists almost as many items that are going to stay the same as are being changed. That's the nature of tax reform - every deduction and loophole has a group that will fight to preserve it. Republicans will boast that tax-deferred retirement plans, the credit for low-income workers and the charitable donations deduction are untouched. They're playing a dangerous game, however, by targeting one cherished middle-class deduction - for interest on home mortgages. The powerful homebuilding lobby will wage a pitched effort to squash Republican hopes. The tax proposal is framed as geared toward the working and middle classes - and there is some help there - but its central focus is a corporate tax reduction that, while popular among the party's corporate base, doesn't excite the general public. Republicans will try to push the legislation through much the way they did healthcare reform - by keeping details murky and scheduling quick votes. Forces are already aligning against it, however, and Democrats are ready to paint the plan as a sop to the rich. Donald Trump and congressional Republicans have a lot riding on a successful effort, but the road ahead is far from easy. B/A
  3. swamp swämp/ noun noun: swamp; plural noun: swamps 1. an area of low-lying, uncultivated ground where water collects; a bog or marsh. Overwhelm with an excessive amount of something; inundate. quag·mire ˈkwaɡˌmī(ə)r/ noun noun: quagmire; plural noun: quagmires a soft boggy area of land that gives way underfoot. An awkward, complex, or hazardous situation. They wanted to drain the swamp, but created a quagmire.... B/A
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