The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Trump actively misled the public on Russian interests

- Ruth Marcus Columnist

There comes a point in the unspooling of every complex political-financial-legal scandal when the story becomes so complicate­d that it’s easy to lose the thread of what matters. The facts dribble out, in ever more confusing increments. The lengthy cast of characters resembles a Russian novel. Competing news demands our attention.

That is where we are now when it comes to the investigat­ion of President Trump and Russia. Harvey deluged the Gulf Coast, drowning out the news about Trump’s involvemen­t with Russia. Still, that news is, or should be, huge. The latest revelation­s feel, at least for now, like more of a political bombshell than a legal problem, but the two are closely related; consider how many public officials have landed themselves in legal jeopardy trying to save their political hides.

To recap, what we know now that we did not know a week ago:

While he ran for president, Trump was simultaneo­usly — and secretly — pursuing financial opportunit­ies with a foreign adversary. Not just any adversary, but Russia, a country described by his party’s previous presidenti­al nominee as the United States’ “No. 1 geopolitic­al foe.” And not just pursuing financial opportunit­ies in Russia, but actively seeking the help of at least one senior Russian official to gain government approval for the project.

Once again: This is not OK. When you run for president, you cannot — you should not — put yourself in the position of using that candidacy as a door-opening business opportunit­y. You cannot — even if the prospect of winning seems remote — put yourself in a position of being financiall­y beholden to a hostile foreign power.

Trump Tower Moscow was not another instance of Trump as unabashed cross-promoter-in-chief, like using the campaign press corps to help tout the reopening of his Scottish golf course. It represente­d something much more disturbing, even unpatrioti­c.

It was possible, when The Washington Post first broke the news of the failed deal, to discount the proposal as braggadoci­o from Felix Sater, the Russian-born real estate developer pushing the deal. But as it turned out, this was more than Sater. The Post next reported that Cohen emailed Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov in January 2016 in a bid to save the languishin­g deal; that Cohen discussed the project with Trump on three occasions; and that the effort was dropped when Russian government permission was unforthcom­ing.

The Trump Organizati­on not only pursued this opportunit­y in secret, it — indeed, Trump himself — actively misled the public.

And as the question of Trump’s Russian connection­s became increasing­ly controvers­ial, he somehow omitted the just-abandoned deal. “For the record, I have ZERO investment­s in Russia,” he tweeted in July 2016. This past January, as Trump prepared to take office, he reiterated, “I HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH RUSSIA — NO DEALS, NO LOANS, NO NOTHING!”

As recently as his interview this summer with The New York Times, Trump disingenuo­usly downplayed his financial interests in Russia. “I mean, it’s possible there’s a condo or something, so, you know, I sell a lot of condo units, and somebody from Russia buys a condo, who knows? ...They said I own buildings in Russia. I don’t.”

We have become inured to Trumpian self-dealing, from doubling membership fees at Mar-a-Lago to profiting off his government-owned D.C. hotel.

This one goes beyond pure greed.

It edges into serious questions about whether Trump’s positions on Putin and Russia have been and remain tainted by considerat­ions not of what is best for the nation but what benefits Trump’s bottom line.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States