“The American people deserve to know that the President of the United States is working to do what’s best for the country — not using his office to do what’s best for himself and his businesses,” Warren said in a statement. “The only way for President-elect Trump to truly eliminate conflicts-of-interest is to divest his financial interests by placing them in a blind trust. This has been the standard for previous presidents, and our bill makes clear the continuing expectation that President-elect Trump do the same.”

The legislation, which builds on several months of Democratic criticism and brainstorming, would direct the Office of Government Ethics to submit an annual report on the finances of “the President, the Vice President, the spouse of the President or Vice President, and any minor child of the President or Vice President.” That would bring the presidency in line with what members of Congress are expected to submit. (Their spouses and children are not required to disclose.)

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But Democrats are realistic about their slim chances of passing such a bill, or even getting a vote for it in a Republican Congress. It’s one of several methods they’ve adopted for drawing attention to Trump’s financial entanglements. In a half-dozen blue states, Democrats have introduced legislation that would not allow candidates to appear on the ballot unless they revealed financial information. In a letter today to the leaders of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) asked senators to push Attorney General-designate Jeff Sessions, Republican senator of Alabama, on policing Trump’s possible conflicts.