What you need to know about the controversies surrounding the Trump and Clinton foundations
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton

(Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.Mark Wilson/Getty Images; Justin Sullivan/Getty Images; Samantha Lee/Business Insider)

In an election season marred by controversy and allegations, it's only fitting for the charitable foundations of the two major party candidates to get tangled in the mess.

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton now find their foundations at the heart of the election discussion with roughly six weeks to go until Election Day in what can only be described as an "unprecedented" situation.

On Tuesday, David Fahrenthold of The Washington Post published a series of stunning revelations about the Trump Foundation, reporting that the Republican presidential nominee used hundreds of thousands of dollars from the charity to settle matters related to his businesses.

Elsewhere on Tuesday, Wall Street Journal reporter James Grimaldi published a story on Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton, being paid $260,000 to give a speech in 2014 for a company that would later work on a project in Haiti directly alongside the Clinton Foundation.

"These [charitable] organizations are ripe for abuse until someone really digs in and looks," Nick Mirkay, a professor of law and associate dean for planning and initiatives at Creighton University School of Law, told Business Insider, later adding that the allegations against both foundations, if true, are a "fundamental violation of why we allow these organizations to exist and give them tax-exempt status."

Both foundations have been grabbing headlines for similar topics for much of the summer. With less than 50 days to go until the election, here's what you need to know about both the Trump and Clinton foundations and the controversies surrounding both.

BI Graphics_Trump vs. Clinton Foundations
BI Graphics_Trump vs. Clinton Foundations

(Skye Gould/Business Insider)

The Trump Foundation

As a private foundation, Trump's charity is in unique territory. It's run by a family, yet as Fortune reported this week, the foundation's contributions have all come from sources outside the Trump family, which would be more common for a public charity.

The foundation, which has been in existence since the late 1980s, is now mired in both "self-dealing" and "pay-to-play" scandals.

This week's Washington Post report, citing tax records, revealed Trump had not made a single donation to his charity since 2008 and sometimes used money from others through the foundation to pay off legal expenses.

The money relating to those expenses, which reportedly amounted to $258,000 from the Trump Foundation, may have violated "self-dealing" laws that prohibit nonprofit leaders from using charity money for self-benefit or the benefit of their for-profit businesses, according to The Post.