• Fat Feeble Felon Trump Flaunts His Corruption - While His Criminal Foll

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 12 02:33:06 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism

    Trump Flaunts His Corruption
    The former president�s shakedown of oil executives may not have been
    illegal, but it is undeniably scandalous.
    By David A. Graham

    One of the few ways in which Donald Trump has improved American politics
    is in making explicit what was once veiled in implication or euphemism.
    During the 2016 election, for example, he said what everyone knew but no politicians would acknowledge: That wealthy donors bought access and
    fealty with their contributions.
    These blunt statements have endeared him to supporters who see Trump as a
    rare figure willing to speak about how special interests and corporations conspire with politicians to screw over ordinary Americans. And because
    he is a billionaire, they see him as immune to these pressures, wealthy
    enough to not be beholden in the same way as typical politicians.
    That brings us to a Washington Post article this morning. At a Mar-a-Lago meeting in April, oil executives complained that despite pouring hundreds
    of millions into lobbying the government, the Biden administration had
    pursued stronger environmental regulations. �Trump�s response stunned
    several of the executives in the room overlooking the ocean: You all are wealthy enough, he said, that you should raise $1 billion to return me to
    the White House,� the Post reports. In exchange, Trump vowed to roll back current regulations and freeze future ones. He told them that, given the savings, a billion bucks would be a �deal� for them.
    David A. Graham: The utter absurdity of Donald Trump and RFK Jr. running
    as �outsiders�
    What Trump was offering is entirely legal and absolutely corrupt. (Or to
    borrow a phrase: very legal and very uncool.) Thanks to Trump�s
    bluntness, there can be no hair-splitting about what�s going on here, and that�s good for public understanding. Trump asked special interests for
    an eye-popping fee in exchange explicit favors. Trump and the oil
    companies might argue (dubiously) that their preferred regime would
    actually be better for consumers, but they are cutting �the people� out
    of the discussion entirely, subverting democracy. The deal is getting
    done between Trump and the suits, behind closed doors. It�s a good
    reminder that Trump�s claim to being an outsider is a sham.
    American politics would be healthier if all politicians were so
    transparent about such deals (though, of course, it would be better were
    they not making such deals at all). Everyone might �know� that
    politicians are cutting deals for powerful interests, but they seldom
    know what exactly those deals are, so it�s hard for them to take it into account when voting. (This is one reason the federal indictment of
    Senator Bob Menendez, the New Jersey Democrat, is so riveting: The
    alleged trades are all laid out so plainly.)

    Trump, however, has said he�s different. Many people took his frankness
    about how the system works to mean that he wouldn�t act the same way as
    the politicians he excoriated. What this report shows is that he�s no different. Trump was describing transactionalism, not critiquing it, and
    the idea that Donald Trump would ever object to transactionalism is
    absurd. He�s a grandee in good standing of the Leopards Eating Faces
    Party.
    David A. Graham: Bob Menendez never should have been a senator this long
    in the first place
    In fact, he�s arguably worse. An ordinary politician might have
    approached this situation with a touch more finesse. First, he�d listen
    to the executives� concerns. Then, he�d lay out his agenda on energy.
    Finally, a campaign aide would hit the executives up for donations. That
    offers a little bit of deniability, which in turns gives a politician in
    office some wiggle room. It�s not like donors can call him up and say,
    You made an explicit promise to do this for me! That would be unseemly.
    If the oil suits produce $1 billion and Trump wins, however, they can do exactly that, since he�s offered an explicit quid pro quo. Not only is he
    just as beholden to special interests as anyone else, here he�s going out
    of his way to make himself beholden.
    One final tawdry thing about Trump�s offer is the implicit threat it
    contains. If they don�t pass the hat to produce the cash, Trump might not pursue the same policies�and, as he notes, that could cost them dearly.
    Tim Naftali: The worst president in history
    Trump runs a real risk to his reputation, as well as his election, by
    being quite so direct about what he�s offering. One of the biggest
    scandals in American political history was Teapot Dome, which involved
    federal officials trading favors to the oil business in exchange for
    cash. It�s one reason that Warren Harding, the president at the time, has
    often been ranked among the very worst by historians. (Trump has
    surpassed him in some recent surveys thanks to his attempt to steal the
    2020 election.)
    Voters just don�t like corruption very much, and Trump�s offer here is
    not only plainly corrupt but cuts to the center of the political persona
    he has cultivated. Trump is a bold truth-teller sometimes about the
    system, but seldom about himself.


    https://archive.ph/d1PVh#selection-685.0-728.0

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