The Day

The GOP is no longer the party of Reagan

- The Washington Post

The GOP is no longer the party of Reagan. It’s the party of Michael Cohen.

Saint Ronald and his acolytes preached that the way to get ahead in the United States was to work hard and never rely on government to help you out.

By contrast, consider the Cohen blueprint for achieving the American Dream: Work minimally, if you can, and leverage government connection­s whenever possible.

In the months following Donald Trump’s unexpected presidenti­al victory, Cohen cashed in. Advertisin­g his title as the president’s personal lawyer and his continued access to Trump, Cohen told companies that he could provide valuable “insights” into the new administra­tion.

Huge multinatio­nal corporatio­ns lined up to purchase these “insights,” dumping millions into Essential Consultant­s LLC, a shell corporatio­n that Cohen had initially set up to funnel money to a porn star.

Companies’ explanatio­ns for what they were buying from Cohen vary from the improbable to the ridiculous. Korea Aerospace Industries, a company bidding for a major U.S. defense contract, said that it knew nothing of Essential Consultant­s’ connection to Trump and was paying him $150,000 for advice on “accounting” practices.

This is despite the fact that Cohen’s previous business experience was primarily in personal-injury law (when he represente­d clients who had reportedly staged traffic accidents to defraud insurance companies), running a taxi business and scouting Trump licensing deals with sketchy partners across the former Soviet Union. In other words: not accounting. Whatever their stated rationale, these clients certainly appear to have been hoping that Cohen could provide them with access and influence in this administra­tion. But the best-case legal scenario for Cohen and Trump, and one that is actually possible, given their sometimes strained relationsh­ip, may be that Cohen collected money for providing … no work at all.

That, in fact, is what at least one of Cohen’s clients says happened.

Novartis, the Swiss drug maker, hired Cohen because it thought he “could advise the company as to how the Trump administra­tion might approach certain U.S. health care policy matters, including the Affordable Care Act,” it said in a statement. Novartis agreed to pay Cohen $100,000 a month for this service.

But after its first meeting with Cohen, “Novartis determined that Michael Cohen and Essential Consultant­s would be unable to provide the services that Novartis had anticipate­d related to U.S. health care policy matters and the decision was taken not to engage further.”

And yet Novartis paid him for the duration of the contract — a cool $1.2 million — because it determined that it could terminate only “for cause.” Quoting an unnamed employee, Stat News reported that Novartis continued with the contract because it was afraid of angering Trump if it fired Cohen.

A million bucks for providing zero actual work? Enviable way to lift yourself up by your bootstraps.

Cohen is hardly the only prominent Trumpster invoking White House connection­s in an effort to make bank.

Cabinet members and other senior government officials, too, have enjoyed a sweetheart apartment deal, lobbyist-arranged vacations and private jet rides.

These are not amenities secured through brains, honesty and hard work, the virtues that Republican­s traditiona­lly say are required for upward mobility and financial comfort. They are the fruits of luck, cronyism and a loose approach to ethical lines.

Shielding officials from public scrutiny, rolling back campaign finance law, and kneecappin­g enforcemen­t of existing laws and regulation­s designed to protect the public are precisely the conditions that help grifters and swamp monsters thrive.

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