36 TIME September 3â10 2018
When that didnât come to pass he told
friends he might be White House chief of
staf. That didnât happen either but still
he swore heâd âtake a bulletâ for Trump.
In the end the Presidentâs longtime
personal lawyer stood before a federal
judge in a New York City courthouse
on Aug. 21 and swore to something else
entirely: that he had engaged in a crime
coordinated by the man who now sits in
the Oval Oice.
Even in a presidency punctuated
by surreal moments it was a stunning
scene. Cohen pleaded guilty to eight
felony counts including arranging pay-
ments during the 2016 campaign to
suppress two womenâs accounts of al-
leged extramarital afairs with Trump.
âI participated in this conductâ Cohen
avowed âin coordination with and at
the direction of â Trump himself. With
that extraordinary statement he im-
plicated the President of the United
States in a federal crimeâto be violat-
ing campaign-inance lawsââprincipal
purposeâ of which he said was to inlu-
ence an election that Trump won by only
78000 votes in three states.
The courtroom drama brought
all the Presidentâs legal and political
problems together in a single supernova.
It highlighted Trumpâs sordid history
with women his willingness to blur the
lines between business and politics and
growing fallout from the investigation
led by special counsel Robert Mueller
who referred the Cohen case to federal
prosecutors. Worse the explosion
came minutes after Trumpâs onetime
campaign chairman Paul Manafort was
convicted on eight counts of tax evasion
and bank fraud in a case prosecuted
by Muellerâs deputies. And it followed
revelations that White House counsel
Don McGahn has cooperated extensively
with Muellerâs probe sitting for more
than 30 hours of detailed and candid
interviews.
It was arguably the most pivotal day
in this presidency and the consequences
are only beginning to kick in. Cohenâs
plea raised questions that cut to the
heart of Trumpâs legitimacy. If Trump
was willing to deploy his vast fortune
to quash salacious stories as Cohen al-
leges what else might he have used his
wealth for? What other damaging in-
formation could the Presidentâs former
ixer share? And what scrutiny awaits
Trumpâs business empire which the
President has sought to shield from the
widening probes?
For now Trump may not pay a
political or legal price. He has beneited
from an unshakable bond with his base:
even as criminal investigations seep
further into his inner circle Trump
has averaged an 87% approval rating
from Republicans so far in his second
year according to Gallup. And many
legal experts believe that as President
he cannot be indicted for a crime while
in oice. âHe did nothing wrongâ
said White House spokesperson Sarah
Huckabee Sanders on Aug. 22. âThere
are no charges against him in this. And
just because Michael Cohen has made a
deal doesnât mean that that implicates
the President on anything.â
There was no question however
that the late-August events mark a
new and dangerous phase for Trump.
Nation
Michael Cohen
once believed
he would lead
Donald Trumpâs
presidential
campaign.
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