“Our entire crony capitalist system, Democrat and
Republican
alike, has become a kleptocracy
approaching par with third-world
hell-holes. This
is the way a great
country is raided by its elite.”
---- Karen McQuillan
Trump allies received hundreds of thousands of dollars
under federal health contract
Video
At least eight former White House, presidential transition
and campaign officials for President Donald Trump were hired as outside
contractors to the federal health department at the cost of hundreds of
thousands of dollars per year, according to documents newly obtained by
POLITICO.
They were among at least 40 consultants who worked on a
one-year, $2.25 million contract directed by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services Administrator Seema Verma. The contractors were hired to burnish
Verma’s personal brand and provide “strategic communications” support. They
charged up to $380 per hour for work traditionally handled by dozens of career
civil servants in CMS's communications department.
The arrangement allowed the Trump allies to cycle through the
federal government's opaque contracting system, charging hefty fees with little
public oversight or accountability.
Over a four-and-a-half month stretch from September 2018 to
January, the contractors collectively billed at least $744,000. The Department
of Health and Human Services halted the contract in April in the face of
widespread criticism after POLITICO reported on Verma's extensive use of
communications consultants.
But under the terms hammered out last year, revealed for the
first time, CMS agreed to allow at least four consultants to bill up to $204,000
over the length of the contract. That included one longtime Verma ally — Marcus
Barlow, her spokesperson while she was an Indiana-based consultant to then-Gov.
Mike Pence — who was greenlighted to bill as much as $425,000 for about a
year’s worth of work.
Those are far higher rates than for the department's regular
communications staff and even the agency’s top political appointees. Senior
career officials in the CMS communications department were paid about $140,000
last year. HHS Secretary Alex Azar’s annual salary is $203,500, a spokesperson
said.
POLITICO obtained roughly 200 pages of billing documents,
which were prepared by HHS in response to a congressional oversight request,
from a former House staffer and confirmed the authenticity of the files with
multiple sources.
The GOP consultants mostly worked as subcontractors through
Nahigian Strategies, a communications firm that's hired multiple veterans of
the Republican party and GOP campaigns. The firm was brought in by Trump
officials under the umbrella of public relations giant Porter Novelli, which
has long maintained a slew of contracts with the federal government.
Nahigian Strategies is run by brothers Ken Nahigian — who led
the Trump transition team in early 2017 — and Keith Nahigian, who has worked
for multiple GOP presidential campaigns. Over a four-month period reviewed by
POLITICO, Nahigian Strategies collectively charged $275,565 for a range of
strategic communications duties, and the brothers themselves billed roughly
$56,970 for their personal services at a $379.80 hourly rate.
The contractors brought in by the Nahigians included Brad
Rateike, an adviser to Trump’s 2016 campaign and former White House
communications official before leaving the administration in July 2018. Six
months later, Rateike billed roughly $1,150 for just three-and-a-half hours of
work as an outside consultant.
Maggie Mulvaney — a Republican fundraiser — charged more than
$2,500 for a stint as a contractor in October 2018. She has since joined the
Trump reelection campaign. Zachary Lamb, who staffed the advance team for
Trump’s 2016 run, billed $7,388.52 that same month.
And Taylor Mason, a Nahigian Strategies employee who was
formerly a regional press secretary for Trump’s inaugural committee, accounted
for at least $54,900 in charges for four months of work in late 2018 and early
2019.
Lynn Hatcher, a former intern for Vice President Mike Pence
before joining Nahigian Strategies, and Justin Caporale, who was a top aide in
the Trump White House, briefly worked on behalf of CMS after leaving the White
House.
Pam Stevens, who did two short stints in the Trump
administration, was brought in to CMS as an independent consultant through
Porter Novelli. The firm billed CMS roughly $280 per hour for Stevens, a longtime
GOP media adviser who specializes in promoting Republican women.
Rateike, Mulvaney, Lamb, Mason and Hatcher didn’t respond to
requests for comment. Caporale declined a request to comment. Stevens referred
all questions to CMS, as did Porter Novelli.
Nahigian Strategies president Keith Nahigian said in a
statement: “Our decades-long experience working as a GSA-qualified
subcontractor to more than a dozen federal agencies, including HHS and CMS, is
nonpartisan and spans Republican and Democratic Administrations, and those
familiar with our work know the exceptional quality and expertise of our team
and the skills of our partners."
CMS called its use of contractors appropriate and in line
with long-standing practices, contending in a statement that it did not have
the in-house staff needed to carry out an ambitious messaging campaign
promoting Verma's policy priorities for the agency.
“When the administrator started in 2017, she wanted to ensure
that the agency was communicating with the American people about CMS programs
and not just relying on inside-the-beltway health press,” a CMS spokesperson
told POLITICO. “At that point, CMS did not have the specialized expertise or
bandwidth needed to execute on a strategic communications plan for the agency’s
work in ensuring all Americans have access to affordable, high quality health
care.”
But the agency’s heavy reliance on contractors — spanning
nearly two years and drawing on multiple political operatives — alarmed current
and former CMS officials and government ethics experts, who questioned the
appearance and justification for outsourcing a substantial portion of the
agency's communications duties. By early 2019, CMS also had hired multiple
political appointees to help manage Verma’s communications.
“It's the classic revolving door,” said Scott Amey, who leads
investigations into government contracts for the Project on Government
Oversight. Amey added that the number of consultants with ties to the White
House or the Trump campaign raises further concerns. “If there's pressure from
the top of the agency to hire these people, you worry about whether this is
payoff for old friends.”
Verma, who herself previously worked as an independent
consultant, has played a central and controversial role in crafting the Trump
administration's health agenda as its top official in charge of Medicare,
Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act.
A fierce advocate for cutting waste in federal health
spending, Verma has championed efforts to tie Medicaid benefits to employment,
unwind parts of Obamacare and loosen insurance coverage requirements — and
taken on an increasingly political role as a prominent critic of Democratic
health proposals like "Medicare for All."
That has won her praise from conservatives within the White
House and GOP. But Democrats and the broader health care community have sharply
criticized Verma's policy priorities as designed to cut benefits and patient
protections, and several of those policies have faced court challenges over
their legality.
Nahigian Strategies became intertwined with the health
department over the first two years of the administration — helping coordinate
Verma’s communications strategy, write her speeches, manage her events and set
up interviews, according to four people familiar with CMS' operations and
contracting details reviewed by POLITICO.
Even before the strategic communications contract took effect
in September 2018, Nahigian Strategies had served as a subcontractor in earlier
arrangements, according to emails and separate contracting documents obtained
through Freedom of Information requests — during which it played a key role in
shaping Verma’s messages and handling her interactions with the press.
Verma directed the subcontracts with Nahigian Strategies,
said two people with knowledge of her strategy, in part because she wanted to
assemble a team that included Barlow, whom she’d initially sought to hire as
her communications director.
Barlow — who previously worked for a series of Indiana
Republicans — had served as a spokesperson for Verma's own health policy
consulting firm, SVC Inc., prior to her appointment to Trump's health
department. But Barlow was blocked from following Verma into CMS after the
White House found out he'd written a column in an Indianapolis newspaper
calling Trump “offensive and ignorant” and vowing never to support him in the
run-up to the 2016 election.
Instead, Barlow became a highly paid shadow staffer — helping
write Verma’s speeches, providing strategic advice and even screening potential
CMS hires, first as an employee of Nahigian Strategies and later as an
independent consultant, according to his billing records and multiple people
familiar with the workings of the department. Between September 2018 and
January, Barlow billed CMS for more than $150,000 as an independent consultant.
Barlow referred all questions about his work for the agency
to CMS.
HHS halted the contract in April after POLITICO first
reported on its existence, prompting the HHS inspector general to open a
review. Top Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, House
Oversight Committee, Senate Finance Committee and Senate HELP Committee have
since launched their own probe into CMS' use of outside consultants.
At a congressional hearing last month, Verma defended the
contract and her broader use of consultants.
“All the contracts we have at CMS are based on promoting the
work of CMS,” Verma said in response to questioning from Rep. Joe Kennedy
(D-Mass.). “Those contracts that we have in place are consistent with how the
agency has used resources in the past.”
Previous administrations have indeed utilized contractors to
aid the rollout of new laws and programs, such as the Obama administration's
public launch of the Affordable Care Act.
But health department veterans stressed that those
contractors were traditionally relied on for specific initiatives, not the
daily work of the agency or for so narrowly supporting a senior official. There
is similarly little precedent for a top political appointee like Verma
directing government funds toward consultants dedicated to boosting her public
visibility — let alone so many of them.
In addition to bringing on Nahigian Strategies as a
subcontractor, Porter Novelli dispatched at least 20 of its in-house public
affairs, branding and social media specialists to CMS at various points over
the four-and-a-half months. It also utilized several other independent
consultants who specialized in communications and speechwriting.
The contractors' deep involvement with CMS' activities
concerned the agency's career staff, three people familiar with CMS' inner
workings said, causing some to raise objections over devoting so many taxpayer
dollars to bring in outside help.
In a statement to POLITICO, CMS did not answer specific
questions about the contractors' duties and whether their work troubled any
agency leaders, saying only that it followed standard government contracting
procedures and that CMS routinely relies on thousands of contractors for
"critical day-to-day operations."
The majority of the consultants with ties to the Trump
administration were brought in through a subcontractor, a CMS spokesperson
noted, adding that "CMS was not involved in their employment, which was a
business decision of the subcontractor."
Government ethics experts said that the consultants’ work
still deserved additional scrutiny.
“There are real questions about the need for these services
and are these services duplicative of what PR people inside the agency are
already doing,” said POGO’s Amey. “There are quite a few red flags that go up
here, in terms of the services that are being outsourced, the rates that are
being paid and the connections of the people being hired that are worth an HHS
inspector general investigation.”
President
Donald Trump speaks to the press before departing the White House in Washington
on Nov. 8, 2019. (Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images)
Trump: New York AG ‘Deliberately
Mischaracterizing’ $2 Million Settlement ‘For Political Purposes’
Share
President Donald Trump accused New York Attorney General Letitia James of
“deliberately mischaracterizing” the details of a $2 million settlement reached
on Thursday.
New York Judge Saliann Scarpulla ruled that Trump must pay $2 million as part of a settlement he, the Trump Foundation, and James’s
office reached in a lawsuit alleging Trump misused his charitable foundation
during the 2016 campaign.
Scarpulla said
Trump let his campaign hold a foundation fundraiser in January 2016 and used it
“to further Mr. Trump’s political campaign.”
The foundation
received $2.8 million from the fundraiser and the money “did ultimately reach
their intended destinations, i.e., charitable organizations supporting
veterans,” Scarpulla ruled.
Instead of
the entire $2.8 million that James’s office pushed for, Scarpulla ordered
Trump to pay $2 million. She also declined a statutory penalty of $5.2 million
that James’s office wanted the president to pay.
James
celebrated the ruling on Wednesday.
“We’ve secured
a court order forcing President Trump to pay $2M in damages after admitting to
illegally using the Trump Foundation to help him intervene in the 2016
presidential election and further his own political interests. No one is above
the law,” she said in a statement.
In another
statement, she wrote, “The court’s decision, together with the settlements we
negotiated, are a major victory in our efforts to protect charitable assets and
hold accountable those who would abuse charities for personal gain. My office
will continue to fight for accountability because no one is above the law—not a
businessman, not a candidate for office, and not even the President of the
United States.”
Scarborough then launched
into his own conspiracy theory:
But I think we all will be absolutely fascinated when we finally
figure out what Vladimir Putin has on Donald Trump and why Donald Trump has surrendered the Middle East,
helped ISIS, helped Iran, helped Russia, helped Turkey, helped all of our
enemies and betrayed all of our allies. You know, a lot of people think that it’s – he has
compromising pictures or something happened in a hotel in Russia years ago. No.
It goes back to money. It’s always about money.
GET THIS BOOK!
Peter Schweizer, author
of “Secret Empires: How the
American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends,”
BULLSHIT! TRUMP AND HIS PARASITE
CHILDREN
HAVE SCREWED EVERY CONTRACTOR AND
PERSON
THEY’VE DONE BUSINESS WITH FROM DAY ONE!
Eric Trump on paying contractors: We pay ‘people when they do
great jobs’
The Trump
Organization has been criticized for stiffing contractors. Contractors have
filed hundreds of
complaints, which date back to the 1980s, alleging that the real estate company
did not pay them.
“We
believe in paying people when they do great jobs. And we get people paid
incredibly quickly. And we pay contractors,” said Eric Trump, executive vice
president of The Trump Organization at Yahoo Finance’s All Market
Summit, adding that the organization only refuses to pay contractors
who fail to complete a job.
“Yeah,
well, they [the unpaid contractors] didn't finish a job. And they didn't do a
good job. And they flaked out. And they were two months behind schedule. And so
you had to let go of them. And you had to bring somebody else in to do the job
that they otherwise would have. And it's called the real world,” he said,
referring to the allegations. “People like to take cheap shots at us.”
Opinion: Trump’s
emoluments transgressions don’t stop with the Doral fiasco
By NORMAN J. ORNSTEIN
When the White House announced that Donald Trump
would host the 2020 Group of Seven meeting at his Doral golf resort in Florida
— an in-your-face bit
of self-dealing and a blatant violation of the Constitution’s foreign
emoluments clause — Republicans and Democrats howled. Reporters had only just
begun to tally the ways awarding himself a government contract could enrich
Trump and the Trump Organization when the president backed down, but not before
he publicly decried the “phony” emoluments clause.
The Doral reversal dimmed the spotlight on
emoluments, but that should not lead us to drop the focus on the rest of
Trump’s self-dealing and conflicts of interest. For strategic reasons, the
House of Representatives may not include emoluments transgressions among
potential impeachment charges. Nonetheless, the number of Trump’s violations
are staggering, and growing by the day.
There are two separate emoluments sections in
the Constitution; neither are phony, and
both reflect the deep concern the Framers had about possible corruption in the
highest offices in the land.
“Emoluments” are anything of value. The first
constitutional clause, forbidding any officer of the United States from taking
“any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever” from a foreign
government, is in Article I. It has no loopholes; the Framers feared that a
rich foreign government could influence or sway American policy by giving
something of value to a policy-maker. It is not limited to the president or
vice president, but to all holding an office of trust in the U.S. government.
The second emoluments clause is in Article II and
is limited to the president. It reads, “The President shall, at stated Times,
receive for his Services, a Compensation, which shall neither be increased nor
diminished during the Period for which he shall have been elected, and he shall
not receive within that Period any other Emolument from the United States, or
any of them.” Here, the fear was that Congress could shake down the
president by withholding his salary or bribe him by increasing it, and that a
president could use the leverage of his office with states or the federal
government to enrich himself.
We have never had occasion in our history to be
deeply concerned about violations of these constitutional clauses. Most
previous presidents have scrupulously adhered to them in spirit and letter.
Jimmy Carter, to pick one example, put his peanut farm in a blind trust to
avoid any appearance of conflict or attempt to profit via his office.
Trump, whose chief of staff on Sunday said the
president still thought of himself as an innkeeper, has kept ownership of all
his properties and has lied about not participating in their operations. He
pushed officials at the General Services Administration to allow him to keep
his federal lease for his Washington hotel while pressuring the District of
Columbia to lower his property taxes. Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, holding an
office in his administration, has taken valuable trademarks, including, staggeringly,
one on voting machines, from China. Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, holding
an office of trust in the administration, has promoted Trump and Kushner
properties and solicited loans from foreign governments.
In other words, the president is unique in his
corruption in American history. The watchdog group Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics in Washington has regularly compiled a tally of
Trump’s conflicts of interest and violations of the emoluments clauses. The
latest numbers are stark: 1,493 trips to Trump properties by government
officials, usually spending taxpayer money that will enrich the president; 292
promotions of Trump properties by White House officials; 63 foreign trademarks
awarded to Trump brands, mostly from China and Brazil, while he has been
president.
The president himself had made 387 trips to his
properties, 240 of them to play golf. He regularly does semi-official
infomercials for his properties, and he’s told couples considering staging a
wedding reception at Mar-a-Lago in Florida or the Trump country club in
Bedminster, N.H., that, if they do, he might be available for a photo op. He
famously doubled the initiation
fee at
Mar-a-Lago, to $200,000, when he became president, enabling foreign figures
(and others) to gain entrée to the president for a price his businesses
collect.
The message has been received: Foreign
governments, including Romania, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, moved events from
other venues to Trump properties, and foreign countries or other
foreign-connected entities have held 13 events at his properties, surely
enriching him along the way. (He claims profits from foreigners are repaid to
the Treasury; without his tax records, this can’t be checked). One hundred and
twenty-one foreign officials from 71 foreign governments have visited his
properties; lobbyists of all stripes have scheduled events there. Trump has
openly talked about his ventures in places like Saudi Arabia and Turkey even as
he has bent American foreign policy in ways that benefit those countries’
autocrats.
The president likes to pretend that there is no
such thing as a conflict of interest, that his actions are ”perfect” and
“innocent.” But we should not let his lies obscure what are ongoing, direct and
outrageous abuses of the Constitution for financial gain by the president and
his cronies. The House impeachment hearings are concentrating on other abuses
of power, but there is no doubt our Framers would see the emoluments violations
as a long series of impeachable and unconscionable offenses.
Norman
J. Ornstein is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. His
latest book, with Thomas E. Mann and E.J. Dionne Jr., is “One Nation After
Trump: A Guide for the Perplexed, the Disillusioned, the Desperate and the
Not-Yet-Deported.”
Eric Trump’s defense echoes his father’s status quo response.
During the
2016 presidential debate,
President Donald Trump said something very similar. “Maybe he didn’t do a good
job and I was unsatisfied with his work,” he said in response to nonpayment
accusations.
Eric Trump
also noted to Yahoo Finance that The Trump Organization has developed
institutional knowledge about getting the best deals with contractors. “In New
York, we know what contractors are going to be incredible, what contractors are
going to — I won't use a word, but — take advantage of you,” he said. “And, you
know, you have that institutional knowledge. You know your way around. You know
the language. You know the laws. You know how things are built. You know what
kind of foundations work in the ground.”
ANN COULTER
TRUMP’S PARASITIC FAMILY
Jared’s BFF, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman (MBS), and the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, Muhammad bin Zayed (MBZ),
refer to Jared as “the clown prince.” Bone-cutter MBS assured those around him
that he had Jared “in my pocket.”
Following meetings at the White House and also with the Kushners over
their 666 Fifth Avenue property, former Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin
Jassim reported back to the emir that “the people atop the new administration
were heavily motivated by personal financial interest.”
“Truthfully, It Is Tough To Ignore Some Of The Gross
Immoral Behavior By The President” WASHINGTON POST
Trump's sister quits as a federal judge 10
days into formal probe of her possible role in massive family tax scam that
could have ended in her impeachment
· Trump's older sister resigned as an appellate court judge shortly
after a probe opened into her involvement in a family tax scheme
·
· 10 days ago an investigation into whether Maryanne Trump Barry violated
judicial conduct rules launched
·
The case was closed after Barry resigned because retired judges are not subject to the rules
The case was closed after Barry resigned because retired judges are not subject to the rules
·
Barry had not heard a case in two years after transitioning to inactive shortly after Trump's inauguration
Barry had not heard a case in two years after transitioning to inactive shortly after Trump's inauguration
·
The Trump siblings were probed after an investigation found they were involved in a tax scheme related to the transfer of their father's real estate empire
The Trump siblings were probed after an investigation found they were involved in a tax scheme related to the transfer of their father's real estate empire
President Donald Trump’s older sister
Maryanne Trump Barry, 82, retired as a federal judge just days after an
investigation opened into her possible role in family tax fraud scheme.
Barry was a federal appellate judge in the third district, which
includes Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware, and the investigation could
have led to her impeachment.
She had not presided over a case in more than two years, but was still
listed as an inactive senior judge in the third district – usually the step
taken before full retirement.
Barry did not give any reasons for her retirement.
The probe into the Trumps was first opened last fall, after a New York
Times investigation found the Trump siblings engaged in tax schemes in the
1990s, including fraud, that increased their inherited wealth.
+4
Maryanne Trump Barry resigned as a federal appellate judge 10 days into
an investigation into whether she violated judicial conduct rules
An investigation into the Trump siblings opened after the New York Times
reported that they transferred their father's real estate assets improperly in
the 1990s
PRESIDENT of the UNITED STATES DONALD TRUMP: Pathological liar,
swindler, con man, huckster, golfing cheat, charity foundation fraudster, tax
evader, adulterer, porn whore chaser and servant of the Saudis dictators
THE TRUMP FAMILY FOUNDATION SLUSH FUND…. Will they see jail?
VISUALIZE REVOLUTION!.... We know where they live!
“Underwood is a Democrat and is seeking millions of dollars in
penalties. She wants Trump and his eldest children barred from running other
charities.”
WHO IS
FINANCING ALL THE TRUMP AND SON-IN-LAW’S REFINANCING SCAMS???
FOLLOW THE
MONEY!
"I
doubt that Trump understands -- or cares about -- what message he's sending.
Wealthy Saudis, including members of the extended royal family, have been his
patrons for years, buying his distressed properties when he needed money. In
the early 1990s, a Saudi prince purchased Trump's flashy yacht so that the
then-struggling businessman could come up with cash to stave off personal
bankruptcy, and later, the prince bought a share of the Plaza Hotel, one of
Trump's many business deals gone bad. Trump also sold an entire floor of his
landmark Trump Tower condominium to the Saudi government in 2001."
“The Wahhabis
finance thousands of madrassahs
throughout the
world where young boys are
brainwashed into
becoming fanatical foot-soldiers
for the
petrodollar-flush Saudis and other emirs of
the Persian
Gulf.” AMIL IMANI
I recommend that Ignatius read Raymond Ibrahim's outstanding
book Sword and Scimitar, which
contains accounts of dynastic succession in the Muslim monarchies of the Middle
East, where standard operating procedure for a new monarch on the death of his
father was to strangle all his brothers. Yes, it's
awful. But it has been happening for a very long
time. And it's not going to change quickly, no matter how outraged
we pretend to be. MONICA SHOWALTER
WHAT WILL TRUMP AND HIS PARASITIC FAMILY DO FOR MONEY???
JUST ASK THE SAUDIS!
JOHN DEAN: Not so far. This has been right by the letter of
the special counsel’s charter. He’s released the document. What I’m
looking for is relief and understanding that there’s no witting or unwitting
likelihood that the President is an agent of Russia. That’s when I’ll feel
comfortable, and no evidence even hints at that. We don’t have that yet. We’re
still in the process of unfolding the report to look at it. And its, as I say,
if [Attornery General William Barr] honors his word, we’ll know more soon.
Morning Joe: Trump Is ‘Owned by Putin,’ Head of ‘Criminal
Organization’
Listen to
the Article!
Following a discussion of President
Trump’s decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Syria, on Thursday, MSNBC’s Morning
Joe went far beyond standard criticism of the controversial foreign
policy move and wildly claimed it was proof that Trump was “owned by Putin” and
heading up a “criminal organization” that had been “laundering money” for the
Russian autocrat for decades.
As the 6:00 a.m. ET hour segment
about Syria was wrapping up and co-host Mika Brzezinski was starting to go to a
commercial break, left-wing pundit Donny Deutsch interrupted to squeeze in an
unfounded conspiratorial rant in which he accused the President of multiple
crimes: “Let’s not forget it. This is all about failed casinos. He is
owned by Putin because he’s been laundering money, Russian money for the last
20, 30 years. He’s owned by him. That’s what this is.”
Brzezinski voiced her agreement with
irresponsible and unsubstantiated attack: “Oh, my lord....Yeah.”
Deutsch continued his tirade
unchallenged:
You talk to any banker in New York,
any business person in New York, any real estate person in New York, we
have a president that’s selling out our military, that’s costing lives because
he is owned by our geopolitical enemy because he’s been laundering money for
him as a criminal organization for the last 30 years. That will come out in
time.
Co-host Joe Scarborough seemed to offer
a small dose of sanity in response: “That is – that is speculation and only
speculation right now.” However, he quickly added: “I will say that it is
speculation among New York bankers who have loaned Donald Trump money in the
past and who have been following his business career for 30, 40 years.”
Brzezinski chimed in: “Who know a lot.”
Scarborough then launched into his
own conspiracy theory:
But I think we all will be absolutely
fascinated when we finally figure out what Vladimir Putin has on Donald Trump and why Donald Trump has
surrendered the Middle East, helped ISIS, helped Iran, helped Russia, helped
Turkey, helped all of our enemies and betrayed all of our allies. You
know, a lot of people think that it’s – he has compromising pictures or something
happened in a hotel in Russia years ago. No. It goes back to money. It’s always
about money.
He concluded the unhinged discussion
by asserting: “And this president is selling not only America, but its
most important allies, down the river for money he wants to make either while
in office or when he leaves office, period, end of story.”
It’s never enough for the liberal
media to simply express a policy disagreement with Trump and say that the U.S.
abandoning its Kurdish allies in northern Syria would have a negative outcome.
Instead, journalists and pundits must always try to outdo each other to make
the most outrageous declarations imaginable to prove their bona fides as
members of the resistance.
Here is a full transcript of the
October 24 exchange:
6:48 AM ET
DONNY DEUTSCH: Make no mistake,
because it’s easy to forget. Let’s not forget it. This is all about failed
casinos. He is owned by Putin...
No comments:
Post a Comment