By Robert Reich
Trump has described the payments his
bag man, Michael Cohen, made to two women during the 2016 campaign so they
wouldn’t discuss their alleged affairs with him, as “a simple private
transaction.”
Last Saturday, when ABC’s George
Stephanopoulos asked Cohen if Trump knew the payments were wrong and were made
to help his election, Cohen replied “Of course … . He was very concerned about
how this would affect the election.”
Even if Trump intended that the
payments aid his presidential bid, it doesn’t necessarily follow that he knew
they were wrong.
Trump might have reasoned that a
deal is a deal: The women got hundreds of thousands of dollars in return for
agreeing not to talk about his affairs with them. So where’s the harm?
After two years of Trump we may have
overlooked the essence of his insanity: His brain sees only private interests
transacting. It doesn’t comprehend the public interest.
Private transactions can’t be wrong or immoral because, by definition, they require that every party to them be satisfied. Otherwise there wouldn’t be a deal.
Viewed this way, everything else
falls into place.
For example, absent a public interest,
there can’t be conflicts of interest.
So when lobbyists representing the
Saudi government paid for an estimated 500 nights at Trump’s Washington,
D.C.hotel within a month of his election, and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman rented so many rooms at theTrump International Hotel in Manhattan that
its revenues rose in 2018 after years of decline, Trump saw it as half of a
private transaction.
The other half: Trump would
continually go to bat for Saudi Arabia and the Crown Prince, even after the Senate
passed a resolution blaming the Crown Prince for the murder of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi.
“Saudi Arabia, I get along with all
of them. They buy apartments from me. They spend $40 million, $50 million,”
Trump told a crowd at an Alabama rally in August 2015. “Am I supposed to
dislike them? I like them very much.”
Ethics smethics. Without a public
interest, no deals can be ethical violations. All are just private
transactions.
So someone donated $1 million to
Trump’s inaugural committee and subsequently received a $5 billion loan from
the Energy Department. What’s the problem? Both parties got what they wanted.
(Federal prosecutors are now investigating this.)
Trump aide and former Fox News
executive Bill Shine continues to rake in millions each year from Fox News, and
Fox News continues to give Trump the positive coverage he wants. What’s
the worry? It’s a good deal for both sides.
This private transactional worldview
also helps explain Trump’s foreign policy.
According to Trump, North Korea’s
Kim Jong Un writes him such “beautiful letters,” that “we fell in love.”
So what if Kim continues to develop
nuclear missiles? Trump gets bragging rights as the first American president to
have a good private relationship with the North Korean president.
He and Russian President Vladimir
Putin have a “beautiful relationship,” presumably opening the way to all sorts
of private transactions.
In July 2016, after emails from the
Democratic National Committee were leaked to the public, Trump declared “Putin
likes me” and thinks “I’m a genius.”
Trump then publicly called on Russia to find emails Hillary Clinton had deleted from the private account she used when she was secretary of state.
Trump then publicly called on Russia to find emails Hillary Clinton had deleted from the private account she used when she was secretary of state.
That same day, Russians made their
first effort to break into the servers used by her personal office, according
to an indictment from the special counsel’s office charging twelve Russians
with election hacking.
So what? Trump asks.
Even as evidence mounts that Trump
aides were in frequent contact with Russian agents during this time, Trump
insists he wasn’t involved in any collusion with Putin.
Collusion means joining together in
violation of the public interest.
If Trump’s brain comprehends only private interests, even a transaction in which Putin offered explicit help winning the election in return for Trump weakening NATO and giving Russia unfettered license in Ukraine wouldn’t be collusive.
If Trump’s brain comprehends only private interests, even a transaction in which Putin offered explicit help winning the election in return for Trump weakening NATO and giving Russia unfettered license in Ukraine wouldn’t be collusive.
When private deals are everything,
the law is irrelevant. This also seems to fit with Trump’s worldview.
If he genuinely believes the hush
money he had Cohen pay was a “simple private transaction,” Trump must not think
the nation’s campaign finance laws apply to him. But if they don’t, why would
laws and constitutional provisions barring collusion with foreign powers apply
to him?
As we enter the third year of his
presidency, Trump’s utter blindness to the public interest is a terrifying
possibility. At least a scoundrel knows when he is doing bad things. A
megalomaniac who only sees the art of the deal, doesn’t.
Robert B. Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at
the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center
for Developing Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton
administration, for which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective
cabinet secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written fifteen books,
including the best sellers "Aftershock", "The Work of
Nations," and"Beyond Outrage," and, his most recent, "The
Common Good," which is available in bookstores now. He is also a founding
editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause, a member of
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning
documentary, "Inequality For All." He's co-creator of the Netflix
original documentary "Saving Capitalism," which is streaming now.