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Donald Trump's Eminent Domain Empire
Don't
be fooled by The Donald.
Take it from one who knows: I'm a South Jersey gal who
was raised on the outskirts of
Atlantic City
in the looming shadow of Trump's towers. All through my
childhood, casino developers and government bureaucrats
joined hands, raised taxes and made dazzling promises of
urban renewal.
Then we wised up to the
eminent-domain
thievery championed by our hometown faux
free-marketeers.
America, it's time you wised up to Donald Trump's
property redistribution racket, too.
Trump has been wooing conservative activists for months
and flirting with a GOP presidential run—first at the
Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington
and most recently at a tea party event in South Florida.
He touts his business experience,
"high aptitude"
and
"bragadocious"
deal-making abilities. But he's
no more a standard-bearer of conservative values,
limited government and constitutional principles
than the cast of
"Jersey Shore."
Too many mega-developers like Trump have achieved
success by using and abusing the
government's ability to commandeer private property
for purported
"public use."
Invoking the Fifth Amendment
takings clause,
real estate moguls, parking garage builders,
mall developers
and
sports palace architects
have colluded with elected officials to pull off
legalized theft
in the name of reducing
"blight."
Under eminent domain, the definition of
"public purpose"
has been
stretched like Silly Putty
to cover everything from roads and bridges to high-end
retail stores, baseball stadiums and casinos.
While casting himself as America's new constitutional
savior, Trump has shown
reckless disregard for fundamental private property
rights.
In the 1990s, he waged a notorious war on elderly
homeowner
Vera Coking,
who owned a little home in Atlantic City that stood in
the way of Trump's manifest land development. The real
estate mogul was determined to expand his Trump Plaza
and build a limo parking lot—Coking's private property
be damned. The nonprofit
Institute for Justice,
which successfully saved Coking's home, explained the
confiscatory scheme:
"Unlike most developers, Donald Trump doesn't have to
negotiate with a private owner when he wants to buy a
piece of property, because a governmental agency—the
Casino Reinvestment Development Authority
or CRDA—will get it for him at a fraction of the market
value, even if the current owner refuses to sell. Here
is how the process works.
"After a developer identifies the parcels of land he
wants to acquire and a city planning board approves a
casino project, CRDA attempts to confiscate these
properties using a process called 'eminent domain,'
which allows the government to condemn properties 'for
public use.' Increasingly, though, CRDA and other
government entities exercise the power of eminent domain
to take
property from one private person and give it to another.
At the same time, governments give less and less
consideration to the necessity of taking property and
also ignore the personal loss to the individuals being
evicted."
Trump has attempted to use the same tactics in
Connecticut
and has championed the reviled
Kelo vs. City of
New London Supreme Court ruling
upholding expansive use of eminent domain. He told Fox
News anchor Neil Cavuto that he agreed with the ruling
"100 percent"
and defended the chilling power of government to kick
people out of their homes and businesses based on
arbitrary determinations:
"The fact is, if you have a person living in an area
that's not even necessarily a good area, and government,
whether it's local or whatever, government wants to
build a tremendous economic development, where a lot of
people are going to be put to work and make (an) area
that's not good into a good area, and move the person
that's living there into a better place—now, I know it
might not be their choice—but move the person to a
better place and yet create thousands upon thousands of
jobs and beautification and lots of other things, I
think it happens to be good."
Like most statist promises of bountiful job creation,
government-engineered redevelopment math
rarely
adds
up.
Trump's corporations have
backed casino industry bailouts
and wealth-redistributing
"tax-increment
financing" schemes—the
very kind
of taxpayer-subsidized interventions we've seen on a
grand scale under the Obama administration.
Championing liberty begins at the local level. There is
nothing more fundamental than the principle that a
man's home is his castle.
Donald Trump's career-long willingness to trample this
right tells you everything you need to know about his
bogus tea party sideshow.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Michelle Malkin
[email
her]
is the author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our
Shores.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow's review. Click
here
for Michelle Malkin's website. Michelle Malkin
is also author of
Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild
and the just-released
Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks & Cronies.





