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Point fingers and feign outrage all you want, Dems. The holy grail of a Trump crime is still missing and you darn well know it

Ed Rogers

By Ed Rogers The Washington Post

Published July 17, 2017

Point fingers and feign outrage all you want, Dems. The holy grail of a Trump crime is still missing and you darn well know it
What has really happened since Donald Trump Jr. released his email chain setting up a meeting last June with a Russian lawyer? Are Democrats and their allies in the media any closer to having their high crime or misdemeanor?

Answer: No.

As Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz stated Tuesday, "it is unlikely that attendance at the meeting violated any criminal statute." Well said, Mr. Dershowitz.

And yet, the media would have you believe that the meeting Trump Jr. described as "literally just a wasted 20 minutes" is a smoking gun that will inevitably take President Trump, his administration and his entire family down forever.

In reality, Trump Jr.'s emails show he has nothing to hide.

Further to this point, Trump Jr. went on "Hannity" Tuesday night to speak specifically about his actions. Granted, Sean Hannity is not always interested in giving a complete, unvarnished account of what happens in Trump World and his questions are softballs, but Trump Jr. made some important points nonetheless - namely, the fact that there was no subsequent follow-up or contact with the Russian lawyer and "nothing to tell" then-candidate Trump. Therefore, unless you decide to believe he is lying, there was no "collusion." The holy grail is still missing.


I don't think Trump Jr. went on national television and told a bunch of lies. Undoubtedly, the president's enemies will believe that they are justified in feeling otherwise. But Trump Jr. has little incentive to do anything but tell the truth at this point.

Even if we suppose there was follow-up from the campaign with the Russian lawyer, it is hard to say that more conversations or meetings would have amounted to a crime. And yes, something can be wrong but not illegal. However, that is not the argument Democrats and their allies in the media want to make. They want this to crack the foundation of the Trump presidency. They want it to crumble.

Blinded by disdain for the president, liberals and the media pack are mostly trying to create credibility for accusations of criminal violations and impeachable offenses. They embellish everything just so that they can keep the story moving. Maybe they will get a break and someone will stumble into a crime during the investigation into the non-crimes from the fall campaign.

In their search for a nonexistent smoking gun, Trump's opponents appear at least partially satisfied by the constant hounding of the White House and the president's family.

In politics, being innocent is just an advantage. It is not determinative. And although the facts do not support the left's pursuit of criminal wrongdoing on the part of the Trump clan, Trump Jr. is sure to face a lot of harassment and he may make more mistakes. But that is far from being in the crosshairs of an American law enforcement investigation that could bring down a president. Sorry to the Trump haters for being such a buzz-kill.

If Trump Jr. is guilty of anything, it is letting someone so lacking in credibility (like music publicist Rob Goldstone) have unfettered access to his schedule. Danger. You usually see your enemies coming, but it is your friends who will blindside you and get you in trouble.

Anyway, Trump's enemies are desperate for something impeachable. But remember, there is no such thing as the crime of collusion. It's not even a misdemeanor. And unless the Russian lawyer provided an illegal contribution, stolen property, etc., to the Trump campaign, there is no crime that will take this story where the media want it to go. But that doesn't mean they will quit trying.

Ed Rogers is a a political consultant and a veteran of the White House and several national campaigns. He is the chairman of the lobbying and communications firm BGR Group, which he founded with former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour in 1991."


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