I’ve written quite a lot about Paul Manafort since 2016, and there has been a consistent if often implicit theme to my analysis. The single most damning thing about Paul Manafort for the president is that the president hasn’t disowned him.
Remember, Paul Manafort was fired as campaign chairman in August 2016. From that point on, Trump has always had the option of arguing that perhaps Manafort was doing things that were ethically questionable or even outright illegal, but he didn’t know of or approve those things and he terminated him precisely because he was too close to the Russians.
It’s well known that bad blood exists between Manafort and the man he replaced as head of Trump’s campaign, Corey Lewandowski. So, naturally, we have to take anything Lewandowski says about Manafort with a healthy heaping of salt. It’s still significant that Lewandowski wrote in his 2017 book Let Trump Be Trump that the soon-to-be president called Manafort a crook when he read the August 15, 2016 article in the New York Times about the off-the-books payments he received from Ukraine’s pro-Russian Party of Regions and their leader Viktor Yanukovych.
“How much of this is true?” [Steve] Bannon asked.
“It’s all lies,” Manafort said. “My lawyers are fighting it.”
“When are they going to run it?” Bannon asked.
“They’re threatening to publish tomorrow.”
“Does Trump know about this?”
“What’s to know? It’s all lies.”
“But if it’s in the paper someone has to give Trump a heads-up, because if it’s in the paper, it’s reality.”
“It was a long time ago,” he added. “I had expenses.”
Bannon knew what he had in his hand.
It was an explosive, Page One story. And even if the story wasn’t true, it was in the fucking New York Times. At the very least it would leave a mark.
Just as Steve had thought, the story ran the next day, August 15, on Page One, above the fold.
“I’ve got a crook running my campaign,” Trump said when he read it.
I can imagine an alternative reality where Trump built his defense much the way that Richard Nixon attempted to do, by at first denying any connection to the crime and then by laying any connections at the feet of his underlings. People would believe that Trump wasn’t orchestrating or apprised of some massive conspiracy to work with the Russians and WikiLeaks because he comes off as pretty much clueless about everything. If Manafort was changing the Republican platform and offering private briefings to the Russians to pay off some debt, that’s a pretty deep betrayal and Trump should be livid about it.
But he did not pursue the Lewandowski angle. Instead, he clearly pursued a strategy predicated on keeping Manafort from becoming a cooperating witness. When Manafort finally began cooperating, he decided to tamper with him and use him as a mole to ferret out information on the investigation, all while dangling a pardon.
The president doesn’t treat Manafort as a convicted and confessed felon who betrayed his trust and caused him endless headaches, but that’s how any normal president would feel. Manafort actively lobbied for a job managing Trump’s delegate battle and made it a selling point that he would work for no pay. But he immediately used his new position to try to repay a nearly $20 million debt to Putin-allied Russian oligarch Oleg Derispaska. As far as I know, Trump has never complained about this. He’s never even complained that the exposure of Manafort’s corrupt business practices in Ukraine did damage to his campaign or that having to fire him had made him look bad for hiring him in the first place.
Now he’s saying that he might pardon Manafort and that he’s being treated unfairly.
If nothing else is clear, we can safely say that Trump never saw it as a viable option to place any blame for Russian collusion on Manafort. For whatever reasons, he could not make him the fall guy the way that Nixon tried to make John Mitchell his fall guy.
There can only be one reason for that, and it’s that Trump is guilty and he knows that a cooperating Manafort can prove it.
I would say that Orange Julius has been doing a very good imitation of a guilty man all along.
Hell, Der Trumper never even called Manafort “weak” upon his plea deal (which is what the Mob Boss does when one of the underlings starts cooperating with the DA). Unlike today’s condemnation of Cohen by Der Trumper, haha.
A prez who calls admission of guilt to DOJ charges “weak”. (“Strong” is sitting in jail to protect the political criminal in the WH.) Don Trumper has completely internalized the vocabulary and ideals of organized crime.
Heckuva job, incompetent white electorate!
And…heckuva job, incompetent (mostly white):
#1-Republican Party
#2-Democratic Party
#3-Federal intelligence and justice agencies
and…
#4-Major national media.
All the King’s horses and all the King’s men:
#1-Couldn’t stop Humpty Trumpty from winning the nomination and the election.
and…
#2-Nor have they…so far, anyway, despite two years of unprecedentedly concerted and powerful efforts on their parts…been able to knock his criminal ass off of the White House wall.
Trump has only been right about one thing.
The DC swamp was…and apparently remains…ripe for the picking.
Can he Roy Cohn his way outta this position?
Considering his previous successes?
I dunno.
The original Teflon Don (John Gotti) made it a long, long way before he fell, and he wasn’t in nearly the position of power as is a sitting U.S. President.
Amazing but true.
This Teflon Don?
It’s like the old real estate saw, now.
He’s at the top of the hill, surrounded by legal…constitutionally provided…armament.
They’re all down there in the swamp, trying to bridge the constitutional moats and barricades that our founding fathers erected to protect their own white asses from potential angry actions of the proletariat or any other rival gangs that might want to take over.
So far?
He’s fought them to a stalemate, using the power of the presidency and what he learned from Roy Cohn.
He may indeed be a clown…but he’s certainly a scary one, ain’t he?
Four years and running, he has successfully defied almost the entire political, governmental and media establishment of the Untied States of Omertica.
And yes, he’s a cheap crook.
But…what does that say about his opposition???
And you wonder why I champion a new day in the Democratic Party???!!!
WTFU.
Incompetence is its own reward.
Failure.
Later…
AG
If you can’t see any objective reason to differentiate Dems from Repubs NOW, or help or at least pay lip-service support to the Dem party now, AG, I have to say I don’t see how or when you ever could—and this one post above Booman’s observations about the new freshman class of progressive WOC!
He’s too busy posturing and preening to pay attention to stupid facts.
Ohhhhhh no!!!
Not true
It’s the “stupid facts” to which I am paying attention.
It is the single most important “stupid fact” that both the mainstream DC Republicans and Democrats were so entitlement-blinded by the power and riches that they had acquired in the DC Swamp over the last 50 years or so that they let themselves be totally blindsided by this hungry, ego-driven criminal.
“Stupid facts?”
Did you watch CNN and the other neocentrist media outlets during Election night 2016 as they merrily ran blindly into a set of “stupid fact”-driven false poll results? I will never forget the look on of total shock on CNN’s little newsman/anchor Wolf Blitzer when around 10PM or later it finally dawned on him that he and all the people who had been pulling his strings and writing his news had been totally wrong about HRC’s supposed divinely decreed ascension into the Holy Presidency.
These are basically the same people who are running the anti-Trump media blitz now. Any belief that they have become more competent is a major “stupid fact!!!”
WTFU up.
You been had.
And…you apparently enjoy it, because you persist in your belief that these “stupid fact”-mongers are going to save you from the sort of catastropocalypse that they have been woofing about since it became evident that Trump was going to totally kick every major Republican candidate’s ass in the primaries.
“Stupid facts” indeed!!!
Sigh…
AG
. . . list of words whose meaning ag doesn’t understand.
Arthur, the wheels of justice grind slow, but they grind exceedingly fine. In the end these guys are gonna get their ass handed to them. Including Trump. You heard it here first.
I hope that you are right.
I really do.
But unless the Democratic Party undergoes some sort of left-oriented revolution very soon, we will face another “lesser of two evils” election in 2020.
Currently “the wheels of justice” to which you refer appear to me to be highly partisan. That blindfold that the classic image of justice wears? It looks to me to be only on her left eye. And that scale? When was it last examined for balance? And by whom?
AG
I mean justice not only in the legal sense — but also in the karmic sense.
Here’s the real dynamic.
The rest is just noise.
I read the article.
Yes.
But only as it is limited to Cohen, Trump and the rest of the lowlife hustlers in that particular little karmic hell.
But it ends up by saying:
First of all…I envision Trump absconding to someplace where he cannot be totally “picked apart,” probably with enough money and/or support from whomever accepts him that he will be able to live his selfish little life out in royal comfort. Russia is my first guess.
But the larger picture is about “the house.”
“Nobody beats the house.”
Do you know why nobody beats the house?
Because the house is crooked too.
Your reply was to a comment I wrote that included:
Occasionally, when the house gets really greedy, when it runs…and nearly ruins… the whole town…it does get beaten.
FDR did it in 1932.
We are at the very least on the verge of a meltdown that would make the Great Depression look like nothing more than a severe rainstorm.
An overpopulation meltdown…worldwide.
An economic meltdown.
And…worst of all…an environmental meltdown.
The current “house” in the U.S…you know, know, the corporate interests that control most of the Republican and Democratic parties, the forces that are backing the unprecedented media blitz against the unwelcome Trumpist interloper(s)…are the real villain here.
Unless those forces are thoroughly beaten…beaten the way FDR beat them, beaten to the point that they actually consider an armed coup…then we just go back to business as usual.
War business.
Anti-human business.
Algorithmically deduced, AI-dictated business.
Inhuman corporate business.
Bottom line business.
The rest is not “just noise.”
Not unless you meant the noise of a failing planet, the noise of whatever humans remain, left to a life of total corporate serfdom.
Sorry, priscianus jr.
I don’t buy it.
Really.
Later…
AG
Somehow I don’t think Trump would be happy spending his declining years in Russia .. especially without money, business, or influence. Hell, he’d be lucky if they even let him in, he’d be all washed up, no further use to them.
I don’t see where we really disagree. Trump thought he could beat the house. Nobody beats the house.
. . . blather], signifying nothing.” — Will SomebodyOrOther, mildly adapted to fit the present case
[He]’s but a walking shadow, a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.
. . . knew ag, personally, despite the intervening centuries! Perhaps he’s a literary archetype?! E.g., “the Fool”?
Simply put, Trump has never recognized that being President is not just another business deal to line his pockets with gold.
Watching Corsi & Stone interviews it’s bluntly obvious they don’t consider political lies and/or dirty tricks anything more than the bonus of their job description. Likewise, Manafort is a grifter to his core and just as he was caught witness tampering from jail through his lawyer it was likewise predictable that he’d see continued cooperation with Trump’s lawyers just a smart business deal.
These are Trump’s associates and that gives the best insight into his own guilt that we have to date. There were no honest people in his campaign and to date he tells us daily that he’s guilty.
I agree.
However, I am puzzled as to when the Republican party turned to a full-throated Trump party? And I use “Trump party” to only characterize its present day lawlessness!
Was it when they lost the 2008 election to Obama?
Or had the rot started earlier?
When they stole the election in 2000, having seated reliably Republican justices in SCOTUS? They perhaps felt that they would always be in power! And when they lost the WH, even though they got their majority in the House and Senate soon after, that was not enough?
How come one major party thinks it can break all the rules, while expecting the other party to adhere to all the rules? When I hear McConnell saying he wants decorum in the House and Senate after the midterms. it boggles my mind!
In most other democracies, the Republican party would have been wiped out in an instant. How flawed is the US democracy that they now have taken the oldest democracy full hostage?
Palin reached a lot of people that otherwise didn’t feel engaged (anecdotal). 2008. This was big. There were lots of other loons around but none of them “caught”.
Mr Trump has been cultivating Republicans for a while – particularly when he started up his birtherism talk – when was that? 2011? He’s very good at a few things – Scott Adams is right about this. Corsi & Stone could never have pulled this off.
Mr Trump captured the Republican party with the nomination (not just the win) in 2016. He was winning primary after primary and wiping the floor (and wiping out) all the other candidates. They’re not stupid, it’s not like reading tea leaves, they knew he was the one. Most of them are the kind that think they can ride the tiger – they think they can outlast this.
There were other things going on but these seem the most interesting to me today.
However, I am puzzled as to when the Republican party turned to a full-throated Trump party? And I use “Trump party” to only characterize its present day lawlessness!
Was it when they lost the 2008 election to Obama?
Or had the rot started earlier?
When they stole the election in 2000, having seated reliably Republican justices in SCOTUS? They perhaps felt that they would always be in power! And when they lost the WH, even though they got their majority in the House and Senate soon after, that was not enough?
The C- Augustus years, at the latest. Have people forgotten the garbage Turdblossom(aka Karl Rove) used to spout all the time? They were doing gerrymandering back then. Rove was boasting about the “permanent Republican majority” they were trying to institute. Then you have crooks like Hastert, DeLay and Newt Gingrich. Do people not remember John Boehner passing out campaign cash on the House floor?
It started with Nixon’s southern strategy and has gathered steam with each decade since.
The inflection point was 1980, Reagan, and the collective delusion of supply side economics. Right wing politics and the denial of reality married then and never shall the circle be unbroken.
The Southern Strategy in itself didn’t turn the party into crooks. I think historians pretty much agree McGovern had little chance of winning the ’72 election. But Nixon, obviously, was a crook. Ray-gun was a crook, and we pretty much knew it then. Bush Sr. was a crook because he was implicated in Iran-Contra. Bush Jr. was a crook. He should be locked up in The Hauge.
I was surprised to learn from Rachel Maddow that during the Nixon Watergate crisis, Father Bush was the chair of the RNC 73-74. He was at that time quite willing to collaborate with Nixon’s Chief of Staff Al Haig to do as Nixon wanted.
as you point out, even if guilty, if he were smart he’d trash Manafort and try to make him the fall guy. Even though laughably false, enough Trumpers and Fox viewers would buy it.
I don’t believe Trump actually said in reference to Manafort, “I’ve got a crook running my campaign,” being a crooked operator himself, and even if he did, he probably didn’t see that as a bad thing, given their common benefactors. The gist of what he probably said was more like, damn, the Times is calling him a crook, bad optics, I gotta let him go. But I’ll keep him close because, again, common benefactors and what he did for me with respect to Russia on the campaign. Because as Booman points out, if he called him a crook then and meant it, in Trump fashion he’d have trashed him nine ways to Sunday going out the door and beyond, and would be trashing him now just as hard if not more than he’s been trashing Cohen.
Trump ditched Manafort for the same reason he ditched Lewandowski – bad optics, and had it not been for each man’s respective expose, not only would they have continued with the campaign, they probably would have ended up with a position in Trump’s crooked administration.
I believe the only reason Manafort is risking the rest of his life in prison by reneging on the deal with Mueller is Trump has told him if he keeps his mouth shut, he’ll pardon or more likely commute his sentence. But looks like Mueller knew more than both he and Trump thought he did, so now its game on.
Oh, one other thing: given developments, and how Trump has been responding all along, it appears Trump thought it would never get out that he stole the election with Russia’s help.
. . . rang true.
Your alternative scenario looks vastly more plausible from where I sit.
Agree except for the last sentence. I’ve thought for a while Manafort has concluded the safest place for him is prison, and if his lawyer was sharing misinformation with Giuliani that ended up in answers to questions on the open book exam, perhaps Manafort has also concluded if he is going to prison, so is Trump, and without having had to reveal anything that would upset Putin. So if he gets a pardon, it may or may not help him, but if it helps him, Manafort won’t have pissed off Putin in the process.
Manafort also appears to either have not been offered the witness protection program (against the Russians) or decided that prison was preferable, which given what happened to Whitey Bulgur is not a sure thing.
In any event, his testimony really does provide the most concrete, typically Trumpian transactional reason for his treason: a real estate deal.
. . . I guess, makes a sort of prosaic sense, since pedestrians often walk on concrete?
The venality does seem very fitting.
” … “I’ve got a crook running my campaign,” Trump said …
On second thought, that’s just the kind of guy I can see eye to eye with … So, hey … Let’s make a deal!
“he clearly pursued a strategy predicated on keeping Manafort from becoming a cooperating witness. When Manafort finally began cooperating, he decided to tamper with him and use him as a mole to ferret out information on the investigation, all while dangling a pardon.”
Once again Trump acts exactly like Trump.
Maybe. Remains to be seen.
I think it’s possible that Mr Trump doesn’t know guilty one way or the other (the experience is alien to him), Manafort is playing the game Mr Trump wants him to play and is properly obsequious, so Mr Trump still has him in favor, and/or Mr Trump’s delusional state/dementia is such that he has no idea what Manafort knows or doesn’t know.
In Trump-Cuckoo-Land, why isn’t it possible that your reason as well as all of these and maybe others aren’t all simultaneously true?
The man could not act more guilty of some very serious stuff if he tried. From day one, so if he looks, talks and acts like a crook,…just might be so.