Perfumes. Watches. Digital trading cards. Sneakers. Guitars.
President-elect Donald Trump’s tasteless merchandise roll-outs are relentless — and show no signs of slowing as he prepares to begin a second term. Trump has long cashed in on his celebrity name with licensing deals, but the implications are different as he fuses his return to office with a freight train of personally branded products. Trump’s merchandise roster is expanding the ever-widening array of avenues through which Trump can be politically influenced by his businesses. And Trump’s flaunting of it is further fueling his degradation of what it means to be a political leader in a democracy.
As my colleague Steve Benen has noted, Trump unveiled a raft of outlandish products during his 2024 presidential campaign, including silver Trump commemorative coins, a cryptocurrency project and Trump-endorsed Bibles. “At the time, it seemed plausible to think that he was trying to cash in while he had the chance: There was a possibility that Trump, already cash strapped, might lose the election, limiting his money-making opportunities,” Benen wrote. “Now that Election Day has come and gone, it stands to reason that his sole focus would be on his return to the White House, not merchandising. And yet, here we are.”
Trump’s emerging infomercial presidency tracks with his intensifying disregard for conflict of interest.
What’s striking is not just the unabated torrent of post-election products like perfumes and watches, but also the opaque business arrangements behind them. As The New York Times recently reported, “unlike some of Mr. Trump’s earlier efforts, the identities of his current merchandise business partners are shielded through the creation of limited liability companies, which are structured to allow those partners to remain anonymous.” According to the Times, reporters who have tried to track down the Wyoming address of a couple of these LLC’s have found “rural strip malls or buildings populated by unrelated businesses.”








