Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Presidency for Sale? How Politics, Branding, and Consumer Culture Became Normal

Julie Telgenhoff

For most of modern American history, presidents were expected to create distance between political power and personal profit. Wealthy presidents existed. Connected presidents existed. Presidents who earned fortunes after leaving office certainly existed. But the idea of an actively monetized consumer brand operating alongside a presidency was largely considered unacceptable territory.

That boundary appears to have changed.

What first caught my attention was not politics itself, but the growing realization that the Trump name had evolved into something far beyond a political campaign. Watches. Sneakers. Bibles. Gold-colored collectibles. Cryptocurrency ventures. Licensing deals. A reported Trump-branded phone launch taking deposits from supporters before manufacturing details became increasingly unclear. The scale of commercialization surrounding a sitting or returning president no longer resembled traditional politics. It resembled a corporate ecosystem.

And unlike many critics who approach this issue from a purely partisan lens, I do not view corruption as belonging exclusively to the left or the right. Political hypocrisy exists everywhere. Congressional stock trading, lobbying influence, revolving-door corporate appointments, and post-office enrichment have become normalized across Washington. But what makes this moment historically different is the openness of the monetization itself.

Donald Trump did not follow the modern presidential norm of creating broad separation between personal business interests and the office itself. While previous presidents typically moved assets into diversified holdings, management structures, or blind-trust-style arrangements designed to reduce conflict concerns, Trump retained ownership of a massive commercial empire tied directly to his public identity.

Legally, this enters a strange gray zone.

Ordinary federal executive employees are prohibited from participating in government matters that affect their personal financial interests under federal conflict-of-interest statutes. But Congress explicitly exempted the president and vice president from those laws decades ago out of concern that forcing a commander-in-chief to recuse themselves from major economic decisions could create constitutional chaos.

That exemption created a loophole unlike anything most Americans realize exists.

As a result, a president can legally maintain ownership of private corporations while serving in office without automatically violating standard federal ethics statutes.

But that does not end the debate.

The deeper constitutional battle centers around the Emoluments Clauses — anti-corruption provisions written directly into the Constitution itself. These clauses prohibit presidents from accepting certain financial benefits from foreign governments or additional domestic governmental compensation outside their official salary.

Critics argue that foreign licensing agreements, international partnerships, luxury developments connected to foreign interests, and even taxpayer spending at Trump-owned properties all raise serious constitutional questions. Supporters counter that many accusations are politically motivated and that no court has definitively established clear enforcement boundaries.

That legal uncertainty is important.

Much of the controversy surrounding Trump’s business empire exists in territory that is politically explosive but constitutionally unresolved. During Trump’s first term, multiple lawsuits stalled because courts ruled that plaintiffs often lacked legal standing — meaning they could not prove direct enough harm to sue successfully.

So why has there not been massive public outrage?

The answer likely reflects larger cultural changes taking place across America itself.

First, the media environment is now deeply fragmented. Different audiences consume entirely different realities. Some conservative outlets place little emphasis on Trump’s commercial ventures, while other national outlets cover them extensively. Many Americans simply never encounter detailed reporting on the scale of the monetization.

Second, Trump’s supporters often interpret the business activity differently than his critics do. His political identity was built around the image of a wealthy businessman long before he entered politics. To many supporters, selling products, licensing his name, or launching new ventures is not viewed as corruption but as evidence that he operates outside traditional Washington norms.

For some, buying Trump-branded merchandise feels less like ordinary retail and more like direct participation in a political movement.

Third, the public has developed what could be called ethical fatigue. After years of nonstop controversy, investigations, lawsuits, and media saturation, many Americans have simply become desensitized. What once would have triggered national shock now blends into the constant noise cycle of modern politics.

And finally, many voters have grown deeply cynical about political ethics in general. They look at congressional stock trading, billion-dollar lobbying networks, lucrative speaking tours, insider influence, and post-office wealth accumulation and conclude that the entire system already operates through financial self-interest. Against that backdrop, Trump’s open commercialism can appear to some as merely more transparent than the quieter enrichment mechanisms that already existed.

That may be the most important shift of all.

The real story may not be Donald Trump alone, but what his rise reveals about America itself.

Politics, celebrity culture, branding, entertainment, financial speculation, social media identity, and consumer tribalism have now fused together into one enormous ecosystem. The old lines separating governance from marketing no longer appear as clear as they once did.

Whether people see that transformation as dangerous, inevitable, corrupt, or simply modern politics evolving may ultimately depend less on facts and more on which version of America they believe still exists.

Perhaps the deeper issue is not any single politician, party, or scandal, but what the public has gradually become willing to normalize.

What once would have triggered widespread discomfort — the merging of politics with celebrity branding, monetized political identity, constant outrage cycles, inflammatory rhetoric, and consumer-style loyalty movements — is now absorbed into the daily background noise of American life.

Former Soviet defector Yuri Bezmenov once warned that societies do not collapse only through invasion or war, but through long-term cultural demoralization: a gradual erosion of shared values, ethical standards, and the ability to recognize when something unhealthy has become normal.

Whether one agrees with his broader theories or not, the question still lingers:

At what point does a culture stop reacting because it has simply adapted to the spectacle?

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