The Denver Post

There is little room for doubt that Trump wanted to conceal his business goals in Russia. His denials are not credible.

- This editorial was written by The Washington Post.

The question of whether President Donald Trump colluded with Russia to tilt the 2016 election is important.

But it’s not the only important question in the Russia investigat­ion, as revelation­s Thursday from special counsel Robert Mueller III make clear.

The disclosure­s suggest that Trump deceived voters about his business aspiration­s in Russia even as he asked for their votes during the primaries of 2016. That is not a minor transgress­ion.

Michael Cohen, the president’s former personal lawyer and fixer, admitted in court

Thursday that he lied to Congress about Trump’s effort to develop a marquee building in Moscow.

Cohen had said previously that the effort ended before the 2016 Iowa caucuses.

In fact, according to the special counsel’s documents, it continued into June 2016, when Trump was the presumptiv­e GOP presidenti­al nominee.

Cohen was apparently in touch with Russians and briefing Trump on the status of the Moscow project.

Cohen told a Manhattan judge Thursday that he lied about the Moscow planning to help Trump’s political messaging.

The president responded by lashing out at Cohen and saying that his former lawyer is now lying.

Trump apparently did not know or did not care that the special counsel had released email evidence bolstering Cohen’s current position.

Perhaps sensing that no reasonable person would believe him, Trump simultaneo­usly maintained that it would not have been a problem if he had pursued the Moscow project during the campaign.

That was not Trump’s attitude before, when he flatly denied Russia connection­s during a campaign in which he seemed suspicious­ly fond of Russian strongman Vladimir Putin.

“The Dems said maybe it is Russia dealing with Trump. Crazy!” Trump tweeted in July 2016. “For the record, I have ZERO investment­s in Russia.”

Trump clearly meant to give the impression that Moscow was irrelevant to his personal interests.

After assuring the American people he did not have financial relationsh­ips with Russia and subsequent­ly winning the election, Trump was even more definitive.

“I HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH RUSSIA — NO DEALS, NO LOANS, NO NOTHING!” he tweeted shortly before his 2017 inaugurati­on.

In fact, as Washington Post columnist David Ignatius found in an extensive investigat­ion last year, “The simple truth is that Trump has been hungry for Russia projects for more than three decades. He has repeatedly touted plans for a Moscow mega-developmen­t and has courted a steady stream of investors from the former Soviet Union for ventures in New York, South Florida and other locations.”

The collusion question is still outstandin­g. But there is little room for doubt that Trump wanted to conceal his business goals in Russia.

His denials, as the public can now see more clearly than ever, are not credible.

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Michael Cohen

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