The Atlantic

Trump’s Contempt for the Law Will Be His Downfall

The president can keep crying “witch hunt,” but it won’t stop the evidence against him from mounting.
Source: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

Michael Cohen’s guilty plea this week, on charges including campaign-finance violations, brought the investigations directly to the president. It has also, however, supplied Trump and his allies with new material with which to cry “witch hunt.” Having argued all along that the investigations are political in character, they point now to strained legal claims focused on Trump’s sexual history. Distasteful, yes, they say; but it has “nothing to do with Russia,” and the charge’s evident purpose is to sully the president and to find some basis on which to bring him down.

In the days ahead, that message will surely also include references to the juror who voted to convict Paul Manafort, but told Fox News that she believed that the prosecutors aim was to flip Manafort for “dirt” on Trump. In this way, Trump will attempt to situate himself squarely in the tradition of other subjects of public corruption prosecutions who, facing legal and political ruin, blame high political intrigue and low motive.

This defense only succeeds to the extent that it breaks into smaller pieces the larger story of the president’s legal troubles, systematically distorting and misrepresenting each element to make the whole seem less than the sum of its parts. So Trump maintained that former National-Security Adviser Michael Flynn, who pled guilty for lying to the FBI, had to go only because , and otherwise was blameless for the dealings with.” His answer to the Cohen plea is that his former lawyer and friend is , not to be trusted. He has a distinguished member of the Republican consulting community who only landed in the sights of prosecutors because of his late and brief ties to Trump and his under the threat of jail time.

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