Yesterday Proved Again Why Russia and Stormy Matter

Filed in National, Open Thread by on May 9, 2018

A lot of otherwise right-thinking people seem to think that the Trump controversies involving Russia on the one hand and porn stars on the other are distractions from the real damage being done by Republicans. I’ll put this as simply as I can: They are wrong.

This was demonstrated late yesterday by porn star Stormy Daniels’ lawyer, Michael Avenatti, who released a document detailing financial transactions between both Russian and American businesses and Essential Consultants, the Delaware shell company Michael Cohen set up for the $130,000 payment to Daniels for her silence.

That might be the headline for most people, but it shouldn’t be. Because payments were also made to Essential Consultants, which has no employees, consulting or otherwise, by some big American companies in what appear to be bribes paid for access to Trump. Josh Marshall has details and analysis, but the facts on their face are damning enough: Both AT&T, which is engineering a merger that needs federal approval, and Novartis, for reasons unknown, paid six-figure sums to this company for “consulting” work.

In short, it appears Trump is running the presidency as a shakedown operation, soliciting bribes for access.

Here’s what nobody is saying, though: Donald Trump has never had an original idea in his life, meaning chances are pretty good that he copied this method from somebody else in politics, he just did it poorly and sloppily. We have all seen the corruption, practiced by Republicans and Democrats alike, by which relatives of politicians get cushy do-nothing “consultancies” that amount to little more than bribes for access. If such arrangements didn’t exist, and companies didn’t participate eagerly, Hunter Biden would be living in a refrigerator box under the train tracks.

It’s been said before but bears repeating: Trump is not the disease. Everything Trump does is a devolved version of what politicians have been doing for generations. Indeed, this is why many Trump voters don’t care — they don’t see the distinction between the Clintons peddling influence through their foundation and Trump nakedly soliciting bribes. There is a distinction — the Clintons have the benefit of legal training so they stay inside the law — but it’s not hard to see why many consider it a distinction without a difference.

At any rate, this, I believe, helps explain why the more mainstream members of the GOP have not objected: Trump is not the only one with shit-stained hands. I believe top members of the party, including Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell, are and have been well aware that foreign money was being funneled into party accounts, both through the NRA and other middlemen.

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  1. Jason330 says:

    “Why can’t he just cheat and steal better, like us.”

    Yeah. It isn’t really a compelling rallying cry.

  2. bamboozer says:

    Corruption is rampant in both parties, few if any are ever held accountable and much like the third world politicians they tend to leave office dramatically richer than when they started. What to do? Good start would be to take the house in November, failing that the wholesale expulsion of the current Dem elite, also rife with millionaires. Truth is though we’ve been targeting Carper for over a decade and Coons a few minutes after he took office with no results.

  3. The slush fund $$’s funneled through at least one Russian oligarch kinda puts the lie to that whole ‘no collusion’ argument. Looks like a whole lotta collusion to me.

  4. Alby says:

    I’m less interested in the collusion than the corruption. I expect former communists to operate that way, but those American companies were paying bribes, and they knew it. I strongly suspect that this isn’t the first time they have entered such arrangements and Trump isn’t the first politician they’ve paid off in this way.

    None of this is an accident. Among the less-noticed effects of the bogus War on Terror was an almost total concentration by the DoJ on running down every flimsy tip about Muslims while abandoning efforts to investigate and prosecute white-collar crime. That was the situation throughout the Bush administration, and there was no sign that it changed under Obama.

    My gripe about Trump, dating from long before he descended his escalator, was that his business model begged for investigation and prosecution; I don’t think any American alive raised more red flags about money laundering. He never should have been eligible to run for office, because he should have been convicted of felonies for money laundering.

    We have gotten plenty of evidence in the past couple of years that he applied money as a lubricant with people like Cyrus Vance Jr. If his last name ended in a vowel he would have been in jail years ago.

  5. mouse says:

    I wonder if Delaware is getting a cut of these payments to Stormy

  6. RE Vanella says:

    LLC Licencing fees, brah. Carney’s bread and butter. Just like Backpage/human trafficking. The pimp always takes a vigorish.

    Income from secret tax havens will solve homelessness, I’m told.

  7. Don’t forget, John Kowalko tried to pass a VERY modest licensing fee increase for the LLC’s, but Bryon Short put the kibosh on it b/c he has a bunch of ’em.

    As long as we’re gonna be Switzerland, we might as well charge like we’re Switzerland.