Dayton Daily News

Uncle Rudy’s rafter-rattling mostly a bunch of gibberish

-

Thank God for Uncle Rudy.

You know Rudy — the eccentric, sometimes batty, uncle who lives in the attic? One thing about Rudy, he always seems to know when family gatherings are becoming tense and descends to the rescue with some gibberish to lighten the mood.

What would we do without him?

Uncle Rudy used to be New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani long before becoming Donald Trump’s attorney. What a difference 17 years makes. The commanding leader who helped America navigate the horror of 9/11 is again making the TV rounds, but this time he seems to be speaking English as a second language. Quite a few cable anchors were at risk of reversing their Botox injections as they attempted to follow what he was saying.

Someone must have whispered in his ear, because Monday afternoon, Giuliani called into Fox News’ “Outnumbere­d” to try to explain what he had said earlier in the day on CNN and “Fox and Friends.” You might need a notepad.

On CNN, Giuliani had talked about a pre-meeting of Trump aides to discuss a strategy for the infamous June 9 meeting that took place a few days later at Trump Tower with Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort and Russians. But, apparently, there was no such pre-meeting, Giuliani tried to explain on “Outnumbere­d.” He said he had heard about it from reporters, who had apparently heard about it from Michael Cohen, Trump’s previous attorney who now appears willing to cooperate with the Robert Mueller investigat­ion. Giuliani said he’d only brought up the pretend pre-meeting because he was trying to get ahead of the story. (Believe me, I’m making this easy for you.)

But now, he wanted to unwind the whole thing because apparently there wasn’t going to be any story to get ahead of. In other words, his thirdhand informatio­n via reporters via Cohen was, apparently, false.

In his morning “Fox & Friends” appearance, Giuliani also had talked about collusion. Again, Cohen is reportedly prepared to tell Mueller the president knew ahead of time about the June 9 meeting, which, if true, could suggest collusion with the Kremlin to interfere with the election. Unless Cohen or someone else can provide corroborat­ing evidence, then Trump’s denial stands.

Giuliani scoffed at the notion that Trump knew, and the attorney added he doesn’t believe collusion is against the law. “I have been sitting here looking in the federal code trying to find collusion as a crime,” he said during the “Fox & Friends” interview. “Collusion is not a crime.”

Later on CNN, he said, “I don’t even know if that’s a crime — colluding with Russians. Hacking is the crime. The president didn’t hack. He didn’t pay for the hacking.”

Technicall­y, Giuliani is correct that there’s nothing in the U.S. legal code directly related to “collusion,” and the word is not even mentioned in the administra­tion memo that appointed Mueller as special counsel. But, as lawyer Giuliani surely knows, conspiracy to defraud the United States, if found to be the case, would be a criminal offense under 18 U.S.C. 371.

Giuliani’s convoluted dodge brought to mind the 1972 burglary of the Democratic National Committee headquarte­rs at the Watergate complex and President Richard Nixon, whose fate revolved around a similar, operative question — what did he know and when did he know it?

Giuliani did have one moment of lucidity when CNN’s Alisyn Camerota asked whether he could be sure Trump didn’t know of the meeting: “Nobody can be sure of anything,” he said.

And, also, this: “What I think and what I know may be two different things,” Giuliani told Camerota.

No one would argue with that — to be sure.

She writes for the Washington Post.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States