The Trump Administration's General Services Administration will reveal on Monday whether the Trump Organization is in violation of its government lease on its new luxury hotel in Washington, a top Oversight Committee Democrat said tells DailyMail.com.

President Trump made the new Trump International DC hotel, which is located in a building leased from the government, a fixture of his campaign – holding press events there, attending an inaugural luncheon there on Thursday, and getting out of his protected limo in front of the hotel during his inaugural parade.

Now, the government must decide whether he is in breach of the lease as president, due to a provision in the contract dealing with federal employees.

Trump got out of his armored limousine to walk by the hotel during his inaugural parade

A provision of the lease bars any elected official from being admitted to 'any share or part of this Lease'. Trump pictured during his inaugural address on Friday

'We'll know Monday, because that's when they go back to work,' Rep. Elijah Cummings, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee told DailyMail.com.

'In other words, the moment he was sworn in, he breached the lease. Because you can't be an elected official. So GSA is supposed to make some kind of determination on Monday,' Cummings said.

GSA didn't provide immediate comment about whether it was readying a decision.

Watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a complaint on Friday, citing the lease, immediately after Trump took the oath of office Friday.

'Unless GSA has received new information demonstrating President Trump no longer owns Trump Old Post Office LLC, and there is no evidence it has, it is now time for GSA to initiate the process for establishing that President Trump's company has breached the lease and is in default,' the group's executive director, Noah Bookbinder wrote in the complaint.

'CREW requests that GSA initiate this process by immediately notifying Old Post Office LLC that it is in breach of the ground lease,' he added.

'The lease bans elected officials from benefiting to avoid conflicts of interest with their duties,' Bookbinder said. 'We know Trump likes to renegotiate contracts for better deals. If that happened here, it will be the President negotiating against the government he leads. His best interests are not the same as those of the American tax payer

The 60-year-lease from the federal government is for $180 million.

The lease states: 'No … elected official of the Government of the United States … shall be admitted to any share or part of this Lease, or to any benefit that may arise therefrom.'

The letter asks the government to kill the lease if Trump is still an owner.

Trump said at his only press conference since the election that he would maintain his business holdings and transfer them to the control of his children.

The top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee says the agency will issue a decision on Monday, the first business day of the Trump administration. Crowds pictured outside the hotel

A separate issue is whether Trump's ownership of the hotel would violate the Constitution's Emoluments Clause, which prohibits gifts from foreigners and foreign governments.

GSA issued a release after Trump's press conference saying it was seeking 'new information' about the hotel's business structure.

'GSA understands that an announcement has been made to change the business structure of the Trump Organization,' the agency, which Trump now heads, said in a statement.

'We are seeking additional information that explains and describes any new organizational structure as it applies to the Old Post Office lease,' the agency continued, The Hill reported.

'Upon receipt, consistent with our treatment of any contract to which we are a party, we will review this new organizational structure and determine its compliance with all the terms and conditions of the lease.'

According to Politico, Trump officials argue that the provision is meant to target elected officials who are in office at the time a contract is being negotiated, not those who are elected afterward.