If you’re thinking “wait, what is the point of submitting financial disclosures at all if if he’s not going to put the signature he’s practiced so many times on the bottom of them, at which point they might as well be creative writing assignments by Don Jr.,” you’re not alone. Stand by for the president to tweet that he didn’t have to sign the documents but he chose to do so because that’s just the kind of American he is, and by the way, this whole thing is a witch hunt and no other president has ever been held to such ridiculous standards.

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Don’t worry, Steven Mnuchin is on it

Speaking of Donald Trump’s financial situation, you may have heard that some people are worried about potential entanglements the president might have with certain entities in Eastern Europe. At the treasury secretary’s hearing before the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday, Senator Sherrod Brown asked the Goldman Sachs banker turned hedge-fund manager turned foreclosure mogul to comply with a March request to “release a list of the president's and his family‘s ‘financial entanglements,’ to verify that none of those connections could raise possible conflicts with laws tied to terror financing, sanctions, and national security.” (During the hearing, a spokesman for the Treasury Department said in a statement that the agency had responded to Brown‘s request on March 31, though, according to CNN Money, the letter failed to include any details about Trump’s business ties). To which Mnuchin essentially responded: check’s in the mail.

“We will review internally whether it’s appropriate for it to come from us or somewhere else, and we’re happy to be responsive to you,” Mnuchin told the senator from Ohio.

Markets will be happy if Trump's trip abroad is slightly better than an all-out disaster

On Friday, the president, along with First Daughter and First Son-in-Law Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, other West Wing staff and dozens of reporters, embarked on a nine-day trip that includes stops in Saudi Arabia, Israel, Brussels, and at the Vatican. The getaway has many worried and not just because the guy writing Trump’s speech on Islam is Stephen Miller, whose previous work includes the administration’s travel ban targeting people from seven Muslim-majority countries. Here’s how the Times says other countries are prepping their officials: