One by one, President Trump’s longtime friends and allies appear to be turning on him at the worst possible moment. On Thursday, Attorney General Jeff Sessions barked back at Trump, apparently at his wit’s end after absorbing months of public attacks from the president. And one of Trump’s longtime friends, David Pecker, the CEO of the company that publishes the National Enquirer, struck an immunity deal with prosecutors investigating a $150,000 payment the president arranged to buy the rights to a story about an ex-Playboy model who claims to have had an affair with Trump. Sessions and Pecker join a growing list of former Trump associates, friends and allies with whom the president is either feuding or entangled in legal battles. Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen implicated Trump in two felony campaign finance violations this week when he pleaded guilty to charges he arranged two election-year hush-money payments. Cohen’s attorney Lanny Davis says his client is eager to spill the beans on everything he knows to special counsel Robert Mueller. Former White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman has been on a high-profile book tour attacking the president as a racist, complete with embarrassing audio recordings of her time at the White House. And former national security adviser Michael Flynn has been cooperating with Mueller’s team and awaits sentencing after pleading guilty to lying to the FBI. Some of these people soured on Trump’s delight in belittling associates. Others have broken with the president after being squeezed by aggressive prosecutors. But the common thread is that all are now political or legal problems for the president, who increasingly appears isolated amid growing legal threats. The president’s frustration with the turn of events was evident in an interview on “Fox & Friends” that aired Thursday, in which he railed against “flippers.” “I’ve known all about flipping — for 30 or 40 years I’ve been watching flippers. I’ve seen it many times, I’ve had many friends involved in this stuff, it’s called flipping and it almost ought to be illegal.” – Trump More on Sessions… In a stunning development on Thursday, Sessions declared that he’d heard enough of Trump’s private and public derision and second-guessing. Trump has spent months tweeting out his anger at Sessions for recusing himself from the Russia investigation, which paved the way for Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to appoint Mueller. And the president has fumed at Sessions for not bringing charges against his Democratic opponents or what he views as rogue actors at the FBI and Justice Department. The Washington Post: Critics fear Trump’s attacks will do lasting damage to justice system. Sessions defended himself following Trump’s “Fox & Friends” interview in which the president said he only gave Sessions the attorney general job to reward his loyalty and asked, “What kind of a man is this?” The former Alabama senator, who has not publicly commented on prior rebukes from the president, returned fire: “While I am attorney general, the actions of the Department of Justice will not be improperly influenced by political considerations.” – Sessions Trump fired back at Sessions in two early morning tweets on Friday. © Twitter/Donald Trump © Twitter/Donald Trump The back-and-forth has reignited debate over whether Trump will fire Sessions. Republicans are warning Trump against it (The Hill). Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who may have inside information here, says he thinks Sessions would be out after the midterm elections (The Hill). The Hill: Trump-Justice feud deepens. More on The National Enquirer’s Pecker… While Cohen has already pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations surrounding payments he made on behalf of Trump to bury allegations from two women who maintain they had affairs with Trump, federal investigators are apparently not done looking into the matter. The Wall Street Journal: Pecker granted immunity in Cohen case. Cohen arranged the payment of $150,000 to buy the story rights to former Playboy model Karen McDougal’s claims that she had an affair with Trump. Cohen directly paid adult-film actress Stormy Daniels $130,000 not to talk. The president has denied the affairs, but concedes payments were made in an effort to bottle up their accusations. The Hill: What you need to know about Trump, Cohen and campaign finance laws. But it gets worse for the president: The Associated Press: Pecker’s safe contained other damaging stories about Trump. More news from the investigations front … Manhattan district attorney eyes criminal charges against Trump Organization. Trump has no power to pardon people and corporate entities convicted of state crimes (The New York Times) … Mueller’s ‘speaking indictments’ offer clues to strategy (The Hill) … The one juror who prevented Paul Manafort from getting convicted on all 18 charges did not trust any of the government’s witnesses and frustrated the other jurors (Reuters). Perspectives Cohen turns 52 years old on Saturday. The Associated Press: A president who demands loyalty finds it fleeting in Washington. Susan B. Glasser: The courtroom dramas that have changed Trump’s presidency. Charles Hurt: The dangerous and dishonest political prosecution against the president. Ryan Lizza: In Lanny Davis, Michael Cohen has the da Vinci of spin. Bradley Smith: Trump’s payments were unseemly, not illegal. © Twitter/CNN |
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