Donald Trump鈥檚 pursuit of the U.S. presidency was motivated by a desire to bolster his vast, undisclosed investment portfolio, according to a speechwriter for former president George W. Bush.

鈥淭hat is, I think, why he wanted the job,鈥 David Frum, now the senior editor at The Atlantic magazine, told CTV Power Play host Don Martin on Thursday. 鈥淒onald Trump is receiving literally millions of dollars in payments right now, maybe more, we don鈥檛 know, it鈥檚 not disclosed, from foreign business partners in the Philippines, in Turkey, in the United Arab Emirates, in India, and in other places.鈥

In a wide-ranging conversation about his new book titled 鈥淭rumpocracy: The Corruption of the American Republic,鈥 Frum scoffed at the notion that the 45th President of the United States has adequately distanced himself from the sizeable family business now in the hands of his children. Any argument to the contrary is a 鈥渢otal joke,鈥 he said.

Shortly before he became president, Trump placed his holdings in a revocable trust managed by his sons Donald Jr. and Eric, thereby removing himself from day-to-day dealings, while maintaining a long-term interest in the success of the business. Last year, ProPublica reported that .

鈥淭he custodians are his brow-beaten children, who report to him at regular intervals about what he is collecting,鈥 Frum said.

Trump is the first U.S president since Richard Nixon not to publicaly reveal his federal income tax returns, though pages from his 2005 return fell into the hands of the press last year. Trump has claimed he is under audit by the Internal Revenue Service, and said his lawyers advised him against releasing tax documents. The extent of Trump鈥檚 foreign business holdings are largely shrouded in mystery as a result.

For Frum, the question of whether Trump is using his political power to line the family coffers is one among many ethical faults he sees with the man at the top of the current U.S administration. Trump鈥檚 relationship with facts and those who speak truth to his power are also big ones on his list.

鈥淚f you speak truth, he doesn鈥檛 hear it,鈥 Frum said of Trump. 鈥淚f there is systematic lying, then the ultimate proper rulers of the country, in a democracy, not a Trumpocracy, they can鈥檛 act because they don鈥檛 know.鈥

Frum even goes so far as to suggest the culture that Trump has cultivated in his Washington inner-circle is toxic to the point of corrupting 鈥渢he good people鈥 around him.

鈥淥ne of the things that is so sinister about his government, is people join often for a mix, they want power, they hope to do good, protect the country, but Trump changes them,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not a personal thing. The people around him do it too, because they have to, including the good people, people who start good.鈥

Trumpocracy, Frum explains, is a system of power that has grown to encompass more than the man behind the desk in the Oval Office.

鈥淭he president governs with the support of others. When he misbehaves, as this president is doing, he does it with the complicity and support of others . . . the permissions from members of his party, from members of congress, from the donor elite, from the rank-and-file republicans in the states, and from a lot of the conservative intellectuals, unfortunately.鈥

Trump鈥檚 approval ratings have cratered to historic lows for a first-year U.S. president, especially considering the roaring domestic economy. But Frum warns this should not be taken as a sign the Trumpocracy will collapse under its own weight.

鈥淭here will be tax relief in 2018. For many people, their after-tax wages will rise and they will like that. 2018 may see Donald Trump鈥檚 poll numbers improve,鈥 he said. 鈥淗e will be an incumbent president. Incumbent president鈥檚 usually win.鈥

Frum鈥檚 said his blistering analysis of a Republican president is a bitter pill to swallow for a registered party member. But he鈥檚 convinced some things are more important than his ideal policy agenda.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want my policy preferences so much that I am prepared to burn down American democracy to get them,鈥 he said.