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    • Source: Follow the money
    • "Follow the money" is a catchphrase popularized by the 1976 docudrama film All the President's Men, which suggests political corruption can be brought to light by examining money transfers between parties.


      Origin


      For the film, screenwriter William Goldman attributed the phrase to Deep Throat, the informant who took part in revealing the Watergate scandal. However, the phrase is mentioned neither in the non-fiction book that preceded the film nor in any documentation of the scandal. The book has the phrase "The key was the secret campaign-cash, and it should all be traced," which author Bob Woodward says to Senator Sam Ervin.


      History


      The phrase Follow the money was mentioned by Henry E. Peterson at the 1974 Senate Judiciary Committee hearings as Earl J. Silbert was nominated to U.S. Attorney. A 1975 book by Clive Borrell and Brian Cashinella, Crime in Britain Today, also uses the phrase.
      Since the 1970s, "follow the money" has been used several times in investigative journalism and political debate. One example is Follow the Money, a series of CBS reports.


      = Donald Trump

      =
      In September 2016, the Trump campaign used the phrase to criticise Hillary Clinton and the Clinton Foundation, a humanitarian aid non-profit; for several events that took place, including a controversial uranium deal approved by the US State Department under Clinton after her charitable foundation received large donations from people with stakes in the deal; Clinton's relationship with Irish telecom billionaire Denis O'Brien; and a 2009 deal over the disclosing of the identities of American account-holders, which the State Department concluded with the Swiss bank UBS; a Clinton Foundation donor.
      In February 2017, Carl Bernstein, who with Woodward exposed the Watergate scandal, used the phrase to encourage reporters to discover President Trump's potential conflicts of interest. The Trump Foundation was later found guilty of illegal campaign contributions and other financial crimes. In November 2019, Trump was ordered to pay a $2 million settlement for misusing the foundation for his business and political purposes.


      See also



      Cui bono, a Latin phrase meaning "To whose benefit?", suggesting a hidden motive.
      Cherchez la femme, a French phrase taking women to be the chief motive in crimes.
      Follow the Money (online newspaper), Dutch news website
      OpenSecrets


      References




      External links


      Fred Shapiro on the phrase's origin at Freakonomics

    • Source: Follow the Money
    • Follow the money is a catchphrase popularized by the 1976 drama-documentary motion picture All The President's Men.
      Follow the Money may also refer to:

      Follow the Money (TV series), a Danish financial crime thriller first broadcast in 2016
      "Follow the Money", a 2017 episode of Family Guy
      OpenSecrets, an American nonprofit organization that tracks campaign finance data that owns the website FollowTheMoney.org

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