Khaleej Times

Michael Cohen ditches ‘ungrateful’ Trump

- Fire and Fury — AFP

washington — Donald Trump’s falling out with longtime lawyer and consiglier­e Michael Cohen is just the latest in a series of spectacula­r feuds between the president and close confidants.

On paper, Michael Cohen’s job seemed straight forward: “personal attorney to President Donald J. Trump.”

But over the course of 20 years, the former personal injury lawyer’s role encompasse­d a much broader suite of services — spokesman, cheerleade­r, foot soldier, enforcer, cleanup guy and — sometimes — attorney.

No one could talk up or back up Trump quite like Cohen, who once said Trump was less of a boss and more of a ‘patriarch’ and ‘mentor.’

Their relationsh­ip began to turn sour when Cohen was not offered a job in the administra­tion, but collapsed completely when Cohen’s legal difficulti­es were met with studied silence by the world’s most powerful man. Cohen had repeatedly got Trump out of scrapes, but Trump would clearly not return the favour.

So tapes of private conversati­ons were leaked, revelation­s were made and then the tweets started flying. “Sounds to me like someone is trying to make up stories in order to get himself out of an unrelated jam (Taxi cabs maybe?),” Trump said.

Aside from Trump himself, there was perhaps no one who did more to get the businessma­n elected than Steve Bannon — fashioning a far-right and Republican coalition that delivered Trump to power.

At the White House, he was Trump’s chief strategist, and first among equals when it came to senior aides. Despite being blamed for the internal feuding and leaks that hobbled the administra­tion in its early days, he left the White House on relatively good terms.

But his participat­ion in Michael Wolff ’s gossipy and extremely damaging book angered Trump. The president dubbed him ‘Sloppy Steve,’ apparently for his militantly casual dress sense, and suggested he “cried when he got fired and begged for his job.”

The pair have since reconciled somewhat. When then-senator Jeff Sessions endorsed Trump for president in February 2016, it was a shot in the arm for his unlikely candidatur­e, conferring establishm­ent legitimacy and boosting his primary chances in the conservati­ve south.

The pair toured the country, campaigned and traded compliment­s, until Trump tapped him to become attorney general.

But when his friend vowed to recuse himself from any cases linked to the investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election, Trump exploded, stating that he never should have given him the job, berating him as “VERY weak” for not investigat­ing Hillary Clinton. But he has not been fired, so far.

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