Jacobs, Lawrence R.2021-02-252021-02-252017-04-18https://hdl.handle.net/11299/218760Washington Post reporter Tom Hamburger checks in on his investigations of Donald Trump and questions about potential conflicts of interest and the nature of the connections to Russia. Are these issues qualitatively different under Trump than previous presidents? How serious was the Russian meddling during the 2016 presidential campaign and do the connections between Trump advisors and Russia amount to collaboration? Are White House decisions and conduct in conflict with the business holdings of Trump and his family? Tom Hamburger joined The Washington Post’s national desk in 2012 after working for more than eight years in the Los Angeles Times’ Washington bureau as a reporter specializing in the intersection of money and politics in the nation’s capital. He has covered the White House, Congress, and the courts and has written extensively about lobbying, campaign finance, and corruption at all levels of government. A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 1996, he worked previously for The Wall Street Journal, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, and the Arkansas Gazette.enReporting Trump with The Washington Post's Tom HamburgerPresentation