idhawkman wrote:It won't have any effect on Trump. Trump is not liable for the business dealings of his lawyer any more than your attorney will reflect badly on you if he represents a mafia boss.
My attorney when I lived in Virginia represented that kid that shot people out of the trunk of his car (Malvo). I'm no different person or guilty of anything because my attorney represented him.
idhawkman wrote:I think lines have been drawn and people will not change their vote for or againt Trump regardless of if Cohen or Manafort are guilty or acquitted. Whichever way it goes one side will say, "see, we told you" and the other side will just get energized to vote the next election.
I can't ever imagine converting you and I'm sure you know that converting me would be almost impossible.
RiverDog wrote:
That we agree on. It's not going to change most people's minds, at least not the 75% or so of us that already have our minds made up. But there's always a certain percentage of the voting population that is sitting on the fence, and repeated stories like this can have a cumulative effect on them. Additionally, stories like this can motivate their bases, either to turn out or discourage them from turning out.
Bottom line is that this is not good news for DJT and the R's.
idhawkman wrote:I don't have any articles to support this but I feel the percentage is more like the mid to high 90's who have their minds made up. I think the few who could be swayed are very few at this point - especially after all the information that has come out about the witch hunt and corruption in the DOJ, FBI and CIA.
Again, anything short of Trump killing someone, I don't think the news is bad or good. The left will rile up their base either way and the Right will do the same.
RiverDog wrote:That's true. But it's a fact that the incumbent POTUS's base doesn't turn out like the out of power base does in midterm elections. Trump needs a victory in order to give R candidates something to run on instead of forcing them to play defense. Trump ought to be out talking up his SCOTUS nominee and putting pressure on the red state senators that are up for re-election rather than whining about witch hunts, Mueller, Sessions, et al.
idhawkman wrote:I don't think the norm can be attributed to this POTUS though. All of the polls said that Hillary had a 95% chance of winning, too. I am predicting now that the Rs will only lose a maximum of 10 seats in the house and will gain 3-5 seats in the senate. The blue wave will not materialize. Partially because Trump will be stumping in battleground areas for candidates but also because the dems are going so far left and introducing socialism.
Both houses of congress will remain in the republican hands after the mid terms.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I think this is going to lead to some immense payback by the Republicans when a Democrat takes office. The next Democrat president better be well vetted and nearly bulletproof for he or she will have a microscope up their behind so deep that we'll know what they ate for breakfast. The politics of payback are going to continue in my opinion. Now personal life including business deals and the like are no longer off limits. The Democrats are making it very clear that now anything is fair game. You want to be a politician of a high rank, be prepared to be squeak for everyone from your lawyer to your children are targets after what the Democrats and left are doing to Trump. They at least used to leave the kids out of it, but Democrats are making this extremely personal. This is going to be a real freakshow for a long time I'm betting. Trump is likely the tip of the iceberg.
This is political warfare the likes of which we haven't seen for a while.
RiverDog wrote:
Polls don't measure the chances of winning percentages. That's what the analysts do. As a matter of fact, the most recent polling data prior to the 2016 election rated as too close to call, or in other words, within their margin of error. Some, like Bloomberg, ABC/WA Post, Rassmussen and Reuters, hit it right on the nose, pegging Hillary with a 2-3% point lead in the last week, and that's exactly what she won the popular vote by.
https://realclearpolitics.com/epolls/la ... president/
It was the pundints and self appointed know-it-alls that missed the boat with their laughable odds of winning percentages.
It's apparent that your predictions for the midterms are influenced more by wishful thinking than factual logic. Nearly all of the polling data has the Dems leading by 6-7%. The math in the Senate, along with the red state solons up for re-election, should allow the R's to at least maintain their razor thin majority especially given that the SCOTUS confirmation hearings are going to occur smack dab in the middle of the campaign, but all the data favors a Dem takeover in the House. It's still a ways out, though.
RiverDog wrote:It's been like that for a long time. Anyone remember Gary Hart? Scores of pols from both sides of the aisle have been brought down by scandals over the past 40 years or so.
More so than personal politics, the press is influenced by sensationalism, in other words, scandals, and liberal pols are just as subject to the Latex finger as conservatives. They're like a pack of jackals when they smell a scandal. But it's going to be tough to find a pol that has accumulated as much scandal rich information on them that DJT has, and that's not even considering his goofy tweets that gives them something to write about ever waking hour of the day. As much as Trump attacks the press, he's a writer and cartoonist's dream come true as he provides them with a continuous stream of material.
idhawkman wrote:All the polls in the 2016 election showed no way for Trump to get to 270 and that was broken down state by state not nationwide. The only reason Hillary had that 3% margin is because of California. So the polls were dead wrong and the pundits were buying into the trash that the polls were predicting.
So if you break it down district by district for the house and state by state for the senate my prediction will come true. Remember you saw it here first.
Granted some districts in NY and Connecticut and California may be blowouts for the dems but the rest of the middle of the country will win more seats than the blowout districts. So the 6-7% you are predicting is just same kind of trash that influenced the pollsters in the 2016 election.
Unfortunately, you can give your middle finger to Trump to make you feel better but in reality your vote won't count for much since the dems in your state would win anyway whether you voted for the dem, rep, or ind.
All I am saying is that all the available data....right, wrong, or indifferent...favors a Dem win and that you're basing your prediction on gut feel.
burrrton wrote:I tend to agree with you about the House flipping, but in fairness to ID, I've heard some pretty rational, non-partisan analyses that came to similar conclusions as him due to the number of Dem seats being defended that went to Trump in 2016, etc.
It's a bit more than gut feel.
Our differences are in the House races, and the indicators clearly favors the Dems.
Can't wait to hear Trump's tweets.
burrrton wrote:No, I'm speaking of House races, too- many people who pay closer attention to this than I are saying the most likely scenario is Dems picking up ~10 seats, with almost no chance to pick up the 23(?) needed to flip it.
I tend to be bearish on that prediction, but just sayin'.
idhawkman wrote:Like playing chess. The govt. has made its move, now it is time for counter move.
Manafort - Guilty on 8 counts all revolving around his personal tax filings as far as I can tell. The other 10 counts around his company are still pending to be announced.
Cohen - All counts are for failure to report income on taxes, lying to a tax attorney and 2 counts on campaign finance violations. All but the last two won't have any bearing on Trump. As for the last 2, one count was on him making too large of an individual donation to a single candidate and the second one is for falsifying the invoice for services in 2017 where he tried to recoup the money he paid. I'm not seeing how this can be linked to Trump - we'll have to wait and see the full story around all of this before we know if it is water off a duck's back or if it has an impact. I'm thinking as of now, no impact.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Now things are getting interesting. How bulletproof is Trump? Now it will be tested. Two of his associates including his personal lawyer are under the gun. Will they flip or stay loyal like previous president associates? Though I think Bill and Hilary had a few associates killed before they could talk. Will see if The Donald has any skeletons they can drag out of the closet to get him.
Sorry Idhawkman, this isn't Russian collusion. That's mostly made up garbage. But tax crimes are very open to manipulation. The tax codes are so complex and ridiculous they could pin tax crimes against anyone if they press hard enough and Trump has businesses so large that some kind of questionable tax code violation is likely to be found. And possibly election law violations if Cohen knows about questionable meetings, payouts, or the like. The Manafort charges I'm not as concerned about, but the personal lawyer is a big deal if he flips on Trump.
RiverDog wrote:Perhaps not with this verdict, but the worst is yet to come. Manafort is scheduled to go to trial next month on more charges, including failure to register as a foreign agent, money laundering, and witness tampering, and that could lead directly to a Russian collusion charge that could ensnare DJT.
And let's not forget the bombshell dropped by Trump's bosom buddy. By saying that Trump directed him to make illegal payments, Cohen is accusing Trump of more than just a violation of a campaign finance law, he's accusing him of a criminal act.
What's interesting is how Trump will react to all of this. Will he pardon Manafort to prevent him from testifying? Will he fire Mueller? We all know how volatile and unpredictable this POTUS is, so nothing he can do would surprise me.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The Russian puppet crap is made up. The media's charges and the use of social media to influence campaigns has been ongoing for a while. I've already stated all the nations that try to influence U.S. elections and using foreign intel is nothing new. I haven't see anything yet that indicates the Russian attacks are anything more than the usual. Hilary Clinton just wants an excuse for her loss and she has manufactured one because the Clintons are some of the savviest politicians to ever play the game.
Yep. Cohen can screw Trump hard, whether or not he is lying. Cohen is very clearly proving Trump made a bad choice of lawyers. Cohen looks like he's going to do whatever he has to do to survive including serve up Trump. Trump has let too many snakes into his empire from Omarosa to this Cohen guy. You let snakes in that serve you because you demand loyalty based on obsequious behavior and those snakes will bite you when other power brokers pull them from their holes.
I was fairly certain they would never get Trump on Russian collusion crap. They may be able to drill him to the wall on tax charges and election law violations. The payments are tied to election laws? It is my understanding that he directed Cohen to use campaign funds to pay for silence? If not, why wouldn't you be able to settle legal problems with money? They have to tie the payments to the use of election funds. Paying someone off not to talk is not a crime as far as I know. Corporations do it all the time legally and so do personal individuals.
Trump's arrogance is going to cost him heavily. He should have given up his businesses to clear his table, but he just couldn't do it. He thought he could do whatever he wants, but he's finding out he cannot.
Sorry Idhawkman, Trump is screwed. There's no way to spin flipping one of his close personal lawyers as a positive or neutral occurrence. Trump may survive doing jailtime, but he's not going to survive in office I don't believe. We'll see for certain soon enough. I think this Cohen guy is going to cook Trump's presidency.
Pence as president will at least be a return to boredom.Pence is a career politician that knows how to talk and won't be twittering. Now we're in for a rough ride the rest of the year. Should be interesting.
RiverDog wrote:From your OP in the Manafort thread:
Any predictions on what he will be "guilty" of? I'm predicting he will not be convicted of anything.
And now you're predicting that there will be no impact. More wishful thinking. Here's the part of the Cohen plea that's significant: Cohen said the first payment was "in coordination and at the direction of a candidate for federal office," and the second was made "under direction of the same candidate." Those statements line up directly with dates and amounts of the Daniels and McDougal payments and is contrary to Trump's public statements. That places DJT squarely in the cross hairs.
This has been a bad week for Trump. His White House lawyer spent 30 hours talking to Mueller about Lord knows what, his former campaign manager was just convicted on 10 counts of tax evasion, and his "bosom buddy" has just testified that Trump not only knew about but directed Cohen to make two illegal payments. Mueller has drawn blood. It's going to inspire his team to go further.
Nevertheless, I still don't think there's a credible impeachment charge in all of this, at least not yet. Unless Trump does something stupid, like fire Mueller, the only thing tangible so far is campaign violations, and IMO they do not rise to the "high crimes and misdeameanors". But what it does do is that it keeps the investigation active, increases the chances of a Trump supoena, keeps him on the defensive, and will hinder his ability to govern.
RiverDog wrote:
Perhaps not with this verdict, but the worst is yet to come. Manafort is scheduled to go to trial next month on more charges, including failure to register as a foreign agent, money laundering, and witness tampering, and that could lead directly to a Russian collusion charge that could ensnare DJT.
And let's not forget the bombshell dropped by Trump's bosom buddy. By saying that Trump directed him to make illegal payments, Cohen is accusing Trump of more than just a violation of a campaign finance law, he's accusing him of a criminal act.
What's interesting is how Trump will react to all of this. Will he pardon Manafort to prevent him from testifying? Will he fire Mueller? We all know how volatile and unpredictable this POTUS is, so nothing he can do would surprise me.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Sorry Idhawkman, Trump is screwed. There's no way to spin flipping one of his close personal lawyers as a positive or neutral occurrence. Trump may survive doing jailtime, but he's not going to survive in office I don't believe. We'll see for certain soon enough. I think this Cohen guy is going to cook Trump's presidency.
RiverDog wrote:
One of Mr. Manafort’s close business associates in Kiev was Konstantin V. Kilimnik, a Russian whom Mr. Mueller’s prosecutors have said had active ties to Russian intelligence — including in 2016, when he was in contact with Mr. Manafort in the months before the presidential election.
Mr. Manafort is set to face another trial in Washington next month, during which his relationship with Mr. Kilimnik is expected to be part of the government’s case. In indictments in that case, prosecutors have argued that Mr. Kilimnik and Mr. Manafort tried to influence the testimony of two witnesses.[/i]
The 8 convictions obtained yesterday hands Mueller a potent weapon as he can leverage Manafort into cooperating with him by means of a plea bargain in exchange for leniency in the sentencing phase. As it stands now, Manafort is on the hook for several decades in a federal penitentiary. Is it all just a bunch of made up crap? Let's wait and see where this all takes us before we conclude that there's nothing to it.
Had it been just Cohen making a payment w/o Trump's knowledge, then it wouldn't have been a crime. But here's the kicker: Cohen has accused Trump of conspiring with him to commit an illegal act with the expressed purpose of influencing the election. Conspiracy to break a federal law is a criminal act.
idhawkman wrote:Not sure you will click on this link and watch the video but it addresses every one of your points above if you watch it all the way through.
http://video.foxnews.com/v/5825126132001/?#sp=show-clips
I do like how you say it is wishful thinking on my part that no impact will happen and then in your last paragraph you pretty much agree with me though.
Your news stations really should get better legal experts to explain what the law is and not use Lanny Davis' biased hope that Trump did something wrong. Again, the funds that paid the ladies were not campaign funds but Cohen's funds that he billed back to the President in 2017 for services which is one of the counts against cohen.
RiverDog wrote:I didn't watch the video, but I did copy and paste a quote that I think you are referring to:
There's two reasons why this is not an illegal campaign contribution. As long as there is a secondary or dual purpose, the law says it's not a campaign expense. So, for the president, it would be personal and commercial reasons for paying money in exchange for a nondisclosure agreement.
That's going to be extremely tough to prove. In his plea deal, Cohen said that the payoff was made with the express purpose of influencing the election. He said nothing about any type of commercial purpose. The timing of the donation, ie just weeks before the election, pretty much rules out any secondary purpose.
And the fact that he's done it in the past, before he ever became a candidate, only supports that argument. And second of all, in order to criminalize an illegal campaign contribution, which is normally a civil penalty, you actually have to show the law's very special on this for that statute. You have to show willful and knowing violation of the campaign laws
Don't forget about the taped conversation that Cohen made that makes it clear that Trump at the very least knew about the donation.
As I told ASF, we'll see how this all plays out. Cohen undoubtedly has more dirt on Trump as the two have been bosom buddies for decades. I saw this morning that he doesn't want a pardon from Trump, so he's going to be singing like a canary. And we haven't heard the last of Manafort, either. He's going on trial in mid September unless they come up with some sort of plea arrangement before then....or if Trump decides to pardon him.
Like any issue, there's a wide variety of opinions on this topic. But if I were you, I wouldn't be betting on anything you hear from Fox News. I suspect that they're the ones that led you to believe that Manafort wouldn't be convicted of anything and probably where you got the idea that these events will have "zero" impact. It's already a huge distraction for DJT as that's all he can talk about, it will inspire Mueller and his team to continue the "witch hunt", it will be a topic discussed in the SCOTUS confirmation hearings, and it will be used by the Dems as a campaign issue.
RiverDog wrote:An appeal by Manafort at this point probably isn't going to have much of an affect on the events to come. He has another trial in 4 weeks. So is he going to forgo his ability to cut a deal with Mueller and instead lay his hopes of avoiding a long prison sentence by taking a chance that an appeal will swing in his favor? An appeal can take many months, if not years, and all the while, Manafort will be in prison waiting for the appeal process to run its course. Remember, he was convicted on 8 charges and not found innocent of any of the 18 charges filed against him. IMO that makes a successful appeal on all 8 seem unlikely. And suppose he's convicted of one or more of the charges against him in the September trial? He could be looking at spending decades behind bars.
IMO outside of cutting a deal with Mueller, Manafort's only reasonable hope for a long prison sentence is for a presidental pardon, and that's probably not going to happen until Trump is leaving office or else he'd open himself up to an abuse of power or obstruction of justice charge. Trump has already gone to great lengths to distance himself from Manafort.
I'm not buying any of your spin or predictions. You've already damaged your credibility with your prediction that Manafort won't be found guilty of anything and further by claiming that these events will have zero effect. Get back with me after Manafort's September trial.
idhawkman wrote:[Ridiculous. He can not be charged with either of those charges by exercising his constitutional power.
I see too many Coulda woulda and shoulda's in your comments above to take it seriously so I'm not buying into your spin either.
Predictions are predictions and it is yet to be seen what impact this will have. 8 convictions on charges that should have been done on an IRS audit is hardly going to have an impact on Trump.
idhawkman wrote:Do you remember John Edwards who ran for the presidency and was charged with election law violations for paying off his girlfriend with campaign funds? He wasn't convicted and he used campaign funds. Trump used personal funds to reimburse Cohen who made the payments out of his own money. He has stated multiple times in public that he paid it without the president knowing and then billed him for reimbursement. Now, he is saying the president knew. One of the statements is false and shows he is a liar. Combine that with his tax evasions and his credibility is scrutinized.
Also, the plea that Cohen gave is a non cooperative plea.
RiverDog wrote:
What impact? You predicted that it wouldn't have any impact. Do you want to modify that to "what, if any" or are you admitting that you were wrong again?
idhawkman wrote:Why would I modify my stance? There's been no impact yet. Not sure what you think the "impact" is.
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