The Palm Beach Post

There is, again, a cancer on the American presidency

- He writes for the Washington Post.

Michael Gerson

Whatever day you are reading this, it is June 1973 in Washington. A lawyer close to the president has turned decisively and damagingly against him. Testifying before a Senate committee investigat­ing the Watergate scandal, John Dean described a high-level cover-up, including the use of hush money, designed to influence the outcome of the 1972 presidenti­al election. And he identified President Nixon as part of that criminal conspiracy.

In the course of Michael Cohen’s guilty plea, a lawyer close to the president admitted his part in a highlevel cover-up, including the use of hush money, designed to influence the 2016 election. And he accused President Trump of directing this legal violation.

This is different from our daily dose of the president’s outrageous tweets and attacks. It is an inflection point in the Trump presidency. He has been credibly accused, not of violating civic norms, but of personal involvemen­t in criminal law breaking. If Trump were not currently the president, he might well be indicted, convicted and face jail time.

His violation of civic norms is not a minor matter. The payment to Stormy Daniels was made 11 days prior to the election. This timing indicates, not the prevention of personal mortificat­ion, but an attempt to deny voters relevant informatio­n. As a result, the

2016 presidenti­al election will always have an asterisk — “outcome may have been influenced by Russian hacking and campaign fraud.”

There is, again, a cancer on the presidency. But the comparison to Watergate offers a caution to the advocates of impeachmen­t. Dean’s testimony was not enough. Many dismissed it as the words of a disgruntle­d employee.

Removing a president requires not a nasty legal storm, but a hurricane. And this president has a political base that may be impossible to unroot.

Yet Trump still has serious cause for worry:

■ The Cohen wildcard is not yet fully played. Cohen’s lawyer, Lanny Davis, hints that his client may be keeping some revelation­s in reserve.

■ There is still a chance that Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort might turn against the president. It is hard to imagine Manafort navigating the criminal justice system with any values but self-interest in mind. Will he continue to choose the hint of a future pardon over the hard reality of additional years in prison?

■ Trump could attempt to fire special counsel Robert Mueller. This, given the credible charges already lodged against the president, would appear an admission of guilt and provoke serious blowback.

■ There could be more incriminat­ing tapes made public. Trump carries an atmosphere of carnivorou­s infighting around him, in which everyone needs to protect themselves from future betrayal.

■ The House of Representa­tives is likely to return to Democratic control, allowing Congress to get past the GOP’s coordinate­d cowardice and begin real investigat­ions of the administra­tion’s corruption.

Every time we gain a peek into the inner workings of Trump world, we see a leader with the ethics of an Atlantic City casino owner who surrounds himself with people chosen for their willingnes­s to lie and cheat at his bidding. A world in which Paul Manafort is “a very good person.” A world in which payoffs and election tampering are all in a day’s work. Left to his investigat­ion, Mueller will expose this world. And the choice for Congress is likely to be clear: Impeach, or tolerate massive corruption.

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