Donald Trump has spent the entirety of his time in Washington flagrantly and shamelessly profiting off of the presidency, all the while claiming it’s costing him a fortune. The most obvious example of this arrangement, of course, is the cash he rakes in through his various for-profit properties, which he still owns. He’s visited Mar-a-Lago more than a dozen times, hosting heads of state at the resort and talking up its amenities in the same breath as discussing bombing another country. He used a state visit to the U.K. to pimp his money-losing golf club in Ireland, where he went out of his way to stay in June despite such an arrangement making no logistical sense. He likewise suggested that Mike Pence stay at one of his properties abroad, despite the V.P.’s official meetings being almost 200 miles away. And then there is the Trump International Hotel Washington, located less than a mile from the White House, where GOP lawmakers, corporate executives with business before the Justice Department, foreign government officials, and anyone looking to kiss the ring knows their money will go far. “Why wouldn’t I stay at his hotel blocks from the White House, so I can tell the new president, ‘I love your new hotel!’ Isn’t it rude to come to his city and say, ‘I am staying at your competitor?’” an Asian diplomat told the Washington Post in 2016.

And while Trump, and his adult sons who run the family business, have thus far cared not a whit about the ethical implications or possible Emoluments Clause violations posed by the Trump Organization, recently it seems the criticism has gotten to them. Last week the president announced that he would not be holding the 2020 G7 summit at the Trump National Doral in Miami, after bestowing the resort with the honor, and now there’s this:

President Trump’s real estate business is considering unloading its opulent Washington, DC, hotel, a move it says is motivated partly by criticism that the Trumps are flouting government-ethics laws by profiting from the property. The family business, the Trump Organization, has hired the real estate firm JLL to market rights to the Trump International Hotel, Eric Trump, an executive vice president of the company, told the Wall Street Journal.