Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

The Vegas Trump Hotel Issued a  Rulebook Prohibiting Employees From Hiring Their Relatives

The Vegas Trump Hotel Issued a  Rulebook Prohibiting Employees From Hiring Their Relatives
Mark Wilson/Getty Images

If you travel up the chain of command at any Trump businesses, it won't be too long before you run into a member of the President's family. Before becoming President, Donald Trump was notorious for hiring members of his own family to oversee his various businesses and interests. And the pattern didn't stop once he took office: his sons continue to run the Trump Organization (which he has not divested himself from), and he hired his daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner to serve as top advisors for his White House administration.

At Trump Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, however, a new set of rules was just distributed which prohibits employees from giving top jobs to family members.


While this level of nepotism has never been seen in the White House before, Trump has avoided any major ramifications from these in-family hirings due to a Republican-controlled Congress, constant distraction by other self-generated scandals, and an absolute shamelessness for his actions.

One has to admit, Trump's willingness to simply do as he pleases without any regard to appearing corrupt is almost admirable, if not for the fact that the Trump Organization is holding its own employees to the very standards Trump himself flounces.

The handbook reads:

While Trump International Hotel Las Vegas does not wish to deprive itself of the services of potentially valuable associates by establishing a policy excluding the employment of relatives, it must be acknowledged that such employment can result in the appearance of a conflict of interest, collusion, favouritism, and other undesirable work environment conditions.

Therefore, management reserves the right to limit the employment of relatives in situations within the company if a conflict of interest is deemed to exist.

The rules also bars relatives from working under one another's "direct or indirect supervision" so as to avoid "situations that create the possibility of conflicts of interest." This would be an admirable rule in most businesses, but, given its placement in a Trump Hotel, many of the President's critics are citing it as yet another example of his hypocrisy.

The handbook has some strong words about sexual behavior in the workplace.

Meanwhile, President Trump himself was recorded bragging about sexually molesting women while at work, and has been accused of sexual misconduct by 19 women. The Trump Hotel's rules would not approve of these behaviors:

Prohibited activity includes 'offensive sexual jokes, sexual language, sexual epithets, sexual gossip, sexual comments or sexual enquiries' and unwelcome flirting.

It seems working for the Trump Organization is a "do as I say, not as I do" situation. Perhaps the President should take a gander at his own rulebook.

H/T - Indy 100, The Daily Beast

More from People/donald-trump

Donald Trump; Barack Obama
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Alex Wong/Getty Images

Trump Slammed After Seemingly Believing Patently False Post From Satirical Website About Obama

President Donald Trump was called out after he shared an article headline about former President Barack Obama—without realizing it came from a satirical news site published nearly nine months earlier.

The post came from the Dunning-Kruger Times, a satirical website, claiming that Obama is making millions in "royalties" from Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies. The piece from the site makes the specific false claim that the advisory Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had stopped paying Obama $2.6 million a year in "royalties associated with Obamacare."

Keep ReadingShow less
Kim Kardashian
Aeon/GC Images/Getty Images

Fans Defend Kim Kardashian After She's Hit With Mockery For Failing California Bar Exam

Kim Kardashian might be playing the part of a well-to-do lawyer in All's Fair, but she might be well on her way to becoming a lawyer in real life, as well.

Back in 2019, Kardashian shared her aspiration to follow in her father, Robert Kardashian's, footsteps after completing an apprenticeship with a San Francisco-based law firm and later concentrating on cases in prison reform and clemency.

Keep ReadingShow less

Comedian Nikki Glaser Divides Fans With 'SNL' Monologue Jokes About Slavery And Human Trafficking

Comedian and professional “I said what I said” enthusiast Nikki Glaser has officially joined the ranks of Saturday Night Live hosts who left audiences gasping, laughing, and nervously checking whether the FCC still has jurisdiction over Studio 8H.

Fresh off hosting the Golden Globes and taping a Hulu comedy special slated for 2026, Glaser made her SNL debut this weekend, and immediately detonated a 10-minute monologue that sent half of Twitter clutching their rosaries.

Keep ReadingShow less
Maya Hawke and her mother, Uma Thurman (left); Quentin Tarantino (right)
Michael Loccisano/Getty Images; Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Maya Hawke Just Revealed Mom Uma Thurman's Shady 'Advice' About Working With Quentin Tarantino

When it comes to Hollywood’s weirdest recurring obsessions, Quentin Tarantino’s foot fetish might be the one thing more predictable than his love of blood splatter and trunk shots.

For decades, the director has been on a cinematic crusade to make sure America never forgets what women’s feet look like—preferably dirty, dangling out of a car window, or wriggling in 70mm glory.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Donald Trump and Bret Baier
Fox News

Trump's Bonkers Response To MAGA Voter Begging Him To Lower Grocery Prices Is Peak Trump

President Donald Trump was criticized for dismissing the concerns of a MAGA voter who begged him to fulfill his campaign promise to lower the price of groceries, instead giving an incoherent response that stings all the more as Americans continue to grapple with the affordability crisis.

Trump sat down for an interview with Fox News anchor Bret Baier, who shared a message from Regina Foley, a retired North Carolina Trump supporter who "voted for you three different times, but she is not happy about how her prices have not come down, that she sees."

Keep ReadingShow less