Thursday, August 23, 2018

Trump news on Youtube Aug 23 2018

U.S. President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe have reaffirmed their

cooperation toward North Korea's complete denuclearization.

In their first phone call since June,... Abe asked Trump on Wednesday to help resolve the

issue of North Korea's abduction of Japanese citizens during the 1970s and 80s.

President Trump agreed to the request,... saying Washington will cooperate with Tokyo's

needs.

Abe spoke to reporters after the call,... saying the two leaders analyzed the latest

information on the North's path to denuclearization.

For more infomation >> Trump and Abe reaffirm unity on North Korea's denuclearization - Duration: 0:37.

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Trump Interviewed About Michael Cohen by 'Fox & Friends' Co-Host Ainsley Earhardt | THR News - Duration: 2:18.

"I understood Michael Cohen very well.

Turned out he wasn't a very good lawyer, frankly."

'Fox & Friends' is typically known as being a safe space for

President Donald Trump — who is a regular viewer of the Fox News

morning show — but in an interview conducted at the

White House on Wednesday, Trump got a little pushback. Kind of.

During the interview which aired Thursday morning,

co-host Ainsley Earhardt pressed Trump, albeit rather lightly,

about his former attorney and "fixer" Michael Cohen who pled

guilty to eight financial crimes on Tuesday. Cohen's offences

included tax evasion and bank fraud as well committing

campaign violations by coordinating pay-offs to silence women

who claimed to have had sexual relationships with his former boss.

Earhardt asked Trump, "Did you direct him to make

these payments? Did you know about the payments?"

She asked Trump to explain Cohen's actions, which he did

by saying that he "made a good deal" for himself

and took the opportunity to "flip" and reduce a lesser sentence.

"Because he makes a better deal when he uses me, like everybody else."

He continued, "People make up stories...In all fairness to him,

most people are going to do that. It's called 'flipping',

and it almost ought to be illegal...They make up things,

and now they go from 10 years to they're a national hero."

Earhardt also set the stage for Trump to attack Jeff Sessions

when she told him that "a lot of people are frustrated"

with the Attorney General's Justice Department.

"I put an Arttorney General that never took control

of the Justice Department, Jeff Sessions.

Never took control of the Justice Department."

The interview then moved to the topic of Paul Manafort

who was also found guilty on Tuesday of eight financial crimes.

"I have great respect for what he's done in terms of what he's gone through."

Earhardt asked the president whether he's considering

pardoning Manafort and also asked him about

a potential Democratic effort in Congress to impeach him.

Back in the 'Fox & Friends' studio after the sit down was aired,

Earhardt framed the rationale for the interview in a positive light for the president.

Speaking to her co-hosts, Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade,

who have both interviewed the president in the last few months,

Earhardt enthused,"I was so grateful that he sat down with us

after such a crazy news day, so we could hear his side of the story."

Asked about his war on the press, Trump said the media is not the

"enemy of the people." But, he said that 80 percent of the media is "fake news."

To read more on this story, head to THR.com.

For The Hollywood Reporter News, I'm Lyndsey Rodrigues.

For more infomation >> Trump Interviewed About Michael Cohen by 'Fox & Friends' Co-Host Ainsley Earhardt | THR News - Duration: 2:18.

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Lifting of sanctions will come after North Korea denuclearizes: Trump - Duration: 0:36.

U.S. President Donald Trump says he wants to lift sanctions on North Korea,...

but that will only happen after the regime gets rid of its nuclear weapons.

Speaking to his supporters at a rally in West Virginia,... Trump said there are "massive

sanctions" on the North,... and that he wants to "take them off quickly",... but stressed

that Pyongyang must get rid of its nukes.

The president was making the speech a matter of hours after the U.S. Treasury Department

announced new sanctions targeting North Korea's illicit trade.

For more infomation >> Lifting of sanctions will come after North Korea denuclearizes: Trump - Duration: 0:36.

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Trump Is 'In Deep' On Time Magazine's Latest Scathing Cover - Duration: 3:49.

 Time magazine depicted President Donald Trump as struggling to stay afloat on its latest cover ― and the image has a familiar feel

 For the publication's Sept. 3 issue, artist Tim O'Brien imagined Trump as treading water in the flooded Oval Office with the caption "In Deep," reported CNN

TIME  It was O'Brien's third in a series of pieces to chronicle the chaos enveloping the Trump White House

In February 2017, O'Brien marked Trump's first month in office with this "Nothing To See Here" cover: A post shared by TIME (@time) on Feb 16, 2017 at 6:15am PST  O'Brien later updated the concept for the April 2018 issue, titled "Stormy

" A post shared by TIME (@time) on Apr 12, 2018 at 5:00am PDT  "As the never-ending flood of breaking news washed over the White House, and the firings, the scandals and the general mayhem filled each news cycle, I felt the storm metaphor was as relevant as ever," O'Brien said four months ago

 Time's latest dig at the president followed Monday's conviction of Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort on eight charges and his former personal attorney and fixer Michael Cohen's guilty plea to bank fraud, tax fraud and campaign finance violations

 O'Brien's latest image was well received by many on Twitter: These three @TIME covers by Tim O'Brien over the past 18 months are pretty amazing

pic.twitter.com/FhiL1sP3sY— Matthew T. Hall πŸ“š (@SDuncovered) August 23, 2018 That's a fantastic cover

illustrator is brilliant.thx— Mel W (@MelW16628227) August 23, 2018 Latest @TIME cover

A follow up to the previous #storm cover. Brilliant. I'm just concerned with where the red button is

pic.twitter.com/ShneHA24sL— Tanya (@TanyaProf) August 23, 2018 Have you seen the new Time magazine cover?? LOL!!— Grace Holoway (@gholoway88) August 23, 2018 Interesting placement of the bottom of the "M" in @TIME on their latest in a series of Trump covers by @TonkaOBrien https://t

co/V7XFb7tSGm— Justin Sullivan (@sullyfoto) August 23, 2018  Here are some of the other ways Time has used its cover to cover Trump's presidency: A post shared by TIME (@time) on May 18, 2017 at 6:24am PDT A post shared by TIME (@time) on Oct 26, 2017 at 4:43am PDT A post shared by TIME (@time) on Jan 11, 2018 at 4:47am PST TIME's new cover: Donald Trump's campaign to discredit the Russia investigation may be working

It's also damaging American democracy https://t.co/z3bDDFdd6c pic.twitter.com/tL7Rafd0ya— TIME (@TIME) June 7, 2018 Tell the president he got the cover again

pic.twitter.com/n4GLtXIM3o— Lisa Tozzi (@lisatozzi) June 21, 2018 TIME  H/T CNN Reliable Sources RELATED COVERAGE Anderson Cooper Crushes Rick Santorum's Claim About Trump's Crooked Associates Paul Ryan's 'Doers' Congress Boast Misses The Mark With Angry Twitter Users Trump Sparks Outrage By Tweeting White Nationalist Talking Point Randy Rainbow Zings 'Thirsty-Ass' Omarosa With 'Oklahoma!' Parody Download BEFORE YOU GO Lee Moran Trends Editor, HuffPost Suggest a correction MORE: Donald Trump Time Magazine Tim O'brien

For more infomation >> Trump Is 'In Deep' On Time Magazine's Latest Scathing Cover - Duration: 3:49.

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Clinton Insider: Trump Never Broke Campaign Finance Laws, But Guess Who Did - Duration: 4:43.

For more infomation >> Clinton Insider: Trump Never Broke Campaign Finance Laws, But Guess Who Did - Duration: 4:43.

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Trump requests Mike Pompeo look at South Africa land reform debate - Duration: 2:12.

For more infomation >> Trump requests Mike Pompeo look at South Africa land reform debate - Duration: 2:12.

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Lifting of sanctions will come after North Korea denuclearizes: Trump - Duration: 0:34.

U.S. President Donald Trump says he wants to lift sanctions on North Korea,...

but that will only happen after the regime gets rid of its nuclear weapons.

Speaking to his supporters at a rally in West Virginia,... Trump said there are "massive

sanctions" on the North,... and that he wants to "take them off quickly",... but stressed

that Pyongyang must get rid of its nukes.

The president was making the speech a matter of hours after the U.S. Treasury Department

announced new sanctions targeting North Korea's illicit trade.

For more infomation >> Lifting of sanctions will come after North Korea denuclearizes: Trump - Duration: 0:34.

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Keller @ Large: Impeachment Of President Trump Should Be A Last Resort - Duration: 2:06.

For more infomation >> Keller @ Large: Impeachment Of President Trump Should Be A Last Resort - Duration: 2:06.

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[인터뷰]ν—ˆκ²½μ˜μ˜ μ˜ˆμ–Έμ μ€‘(Did H.K.Y's predictions correct?→Trump, Park's impeachment, Samsung's confusement) - Duration: 5:26.

That's why it's less than five years old.

I have foretold that the regime will have problems after five years.

.

Thank you very much for your time, I'm sure you're busy.

I have many questions for you, but the first thing I want to know is...

You have made six prophecies about President Park Geun hye, right? I want to hear an explanation about that.

I'd like a detailed explanation.

Park Geun-hye, I prophesied about her in the live broadcast of the station before the president was elected.

I prophesied that President Park Geun - hye will have a huge a ceremony for exorcism at the Blue House(Korean president house).

.

But that is already scheduled.

I predicted already at that time that ceremony for exorcism happens in Blue House(Korean president house) with Park Geun-hye.

I told President Park that she was stuck in the law she had made.

.

That is the National Assembly Advancement Act law. ..

Park changed the law so that half of the members of parliament agree to pass the law.

.

Park Geun-hye, created the advancement of the National Assembly law.

She made it when she was an opposition party, but she became the ruling party, which is what's holding her back.

.

So I foretold that candlelight protest would happen and that she would be impeached.

The court will dismiss the complainant, Park Geun-hye.

The date when you predicted the impeachment.

A few days ago for Park Geun-hye to become president.

You know what? The date of the broadcast is the 17th.

Then, 19th is Park Geun-hye was elected president.

..

I predicted 2 days before that Park Geun-hye is elected for president.

I said she was elected 51 percent.

Indeed, she was elected 51 percent.

That's all seven.

A a ceremony for exorcism has taken place in Blue house and officials are involved.

Then she won by 51 percent.

Then the candlelight protests took place and Park Geun-hye is impeached.

And she's been kicked out in four years. Park Geun-hye is driven out of her political situation by trying to cover constitutional amendment.

I prophesied like this.

I said,

I am correct.

Oh, that's great.

So I prophesied it, and I said that 25 years ago, the number of elderly people in our country surged.

○ Rapid increase in elderly people Korea will become an aged society by 2015.

.

Okay? Then by 2016, Korea will become an aged society.

I prophesied like this. .

Therefore, if you marry soon, I will have to give 100 million won to your wife and 30 million won to have a baby.

If we don't increase the number of births, we will only increase the number of nursing homes.

I told him 25 years ago that if people got married, we would give me 30 million won to them.

So people told me I was crazy.

So it's important to look ahead and talk.

And I prophesied that Lee Kun-hee would surely collapse within a week.

in the course of my lecture

So, five days later, Lee Kun-hee collapsed. He has a stroke of paralysis.

He haven't gotten up yet.

And Samsung will have a new era for Lee Jae-yong.

However, if Samsung does not change its mark to red, it will cause a big stir.

I prophesied like this. Then, after three years, Samsung's cell phone exploded and Lee Jae-yong went to jail.

He got involved with Park Geun-hye too.

The hit rate is very high.

100 percent.

Therefore, these people still do not change Samsung's logo to red.

Blue means trust.

But in the future, we cannot live by trust alone.

We have to challenge myself in the future. Red is a challenge.

So you have to turn on the red light.

Samsung should change its logo to red one and prepare for a different era than that of Lee Kun-hee.

.

I prophesied that after one week Lee Kun hee's era will pass by.

The phone explosion cost more than 100 trillion won(90 billion dollar).

It's amazing.

Samsung should have listened to me. I prophesied that Trump would become president of the United States.

I spoke on the mbn broadcast. I predicted the election of Trump as president.

.

At that time, Trump was last among 16 Republican candidates.

Trump and I met, right? He and I met at the White House. You have to write a name.

.

Bring me a magic.

I'm God now.

god

That's why the man who makes and runs the universe is here for the first time.

I don't do religious activities.

For more infomation >> [인터뷰]ν—ˆκ²½μ˜μ˜ μ˜ˆμ–Έμ μ€‘(Did H.K.Y's predictions correct?→Trump, Park's impeachment, Samsung's confusement) - Duration: 5:26.

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2 former Trump associates found guilty minutes apart in federal court - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> 2 former Trump associates found guilty minutes apart in federal court - Duration: 1:02.

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Jimmy Carter Attacks Donald Trump's Character Amid Calls for Impeachment: 'He's a Disaster' - News T - Duration: 4:51.

 Former President Jimmy Carter says he has been taught to value truthfulness — and that is one of the primary reasons he does not support the presidency of Donald Trump

 The retired peanut farmer, 93, has been less vocal than other former commanders in chief about the goings-on in the White House, but in a recent interview with The Washington Post, Carter seared Trump's policies and character

 "I think he's a disaster … In human rights and in treating people equal," the 39th president said before his wife, former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, 91, jumped in

"The worst is that he is not telling the truth, and that just hurts everything," she added

 Carter's comments come as the president is facing fresh calls for his impeachment following the guilty plea of his former longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen and the conviction of his former campaign manager Paul Manafort, both on Tuesday

 Cohen implicated Trump in a federal crime when the lawyer admitted to a federal judge that, at Trump's direction, he made payments to two women who claimed they had affairs with Trump "for the purpose of influencing the election

" (Trump has denied the affairs with porn star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal

)  Carter told the Post he prizes honesty in part because when he attended the U

S. Naval Academy, students were expelled for telling even the smallest lie. And in Carter's eyes, Trump's relationship with the truth does not hold up

"I think there's been an attitude of ignorance toward the truth by President Trump," Carter said

 To Carter, the current president also symbolizes the importance the current political system places on wealth

"Money is now preeminent. I mean, it's just gone to hell now," he lamented.  Still, Carter is optimistic about the future of American democracy

Even if he doesn't believe he'll witness the positive changes himself, he's hopeful that Americans "will eventually return to what's right and what's wrong, and what's decent and what's indecent, and what's truthful and what's lies

"  Carter has questioned Trump's values before but never in such explicit terms

During a Late Show appearance in March, when host Stephen Colbert asked if "America [wants] kind of a jerk as president?" Carter quipped back, "Apparently, from this recent election year

I never knew it before."  And when Colbert picked the former Democratic president's brain about the one quality every president should have, Carter took a jab at Trump's trustworthiness

"I used to think it was to tell the truth, but I've changed my mind lately," he said

 In the past, Carter has also praised Trump, specifically his efforts with North Korea

"If President Trump is successful in getting a peace treaty that's acceptable to both sides with North Korea, I think he certainly ought to be considered for the Nobel Peace Prize," Carter told Politico in May

 And at the end of the Colbert interview, Carter expressed earnest well wishes for Trump's time in office

"I pray that he'll be a good president," he said. "And that he'll keep our country at peace and that he'll refrain from using nuclear weapons and that he will promote human rights

"

For more infomation >> Jimmy Carter Attacks Donald Trump's Character Amid Calls for Impeachment: 'He's a Disaster' - News T - Duration: 4:51.

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Trump will visit Evansville - Duration: 0:24.

For more infomation >> Trump will visit Evansville - Duration: 0:24.

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Donald Trump impeachment threat as Cohen ready to Meuller - Duration: 4:53.

US President Donald Trump is facing the prospect of calls for his impeachment after his personal lawyer sensationally told a federal court he broke election campaign finance laws at Mr Trump's direction

Mr Cohen, who once said he would "take a bullet" for the president, pleaded guilty to eight criminal charges of tax evasion, bank fraud and campaign finance violations on Wednesday (AEST), and claimed he acted on Mr Trump's orders

He told the court in New York that a presidential candidate directed him to arrange payments ahead of the 2016 election to silence two women who said they had affairs him

In television interviews, Mr Cohen's lawyer Lanny Davis later said the longtime Trump confidante had information that would be of interest to special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigating Russian collusion in influencing the 2016 presidential campaign

While Mr Cohen did not name Mr Trump in court, Mr Davis later accused the president of being directly involved

Mr Cohen had "information … regarding both knowledge of a conspiracy to corrupt American democracy by the Russians and the failure to report that knowledge to the FBI," Mr Davis told MSNBC

 He went on to tell CNN that "Cohen has knowledge that would be of interest to the special counsel about whether Donald Trump knew ahead of time about the hacking of emails"

Mr Davis also said his client would not accept a presidential pardon if Mr Trump offered him one because he wanted no part in what he saw as the president's abuse of his clemency power

"He does not want anything from Donald Trump," Mr Davis told MSNBC.Mr Cohen's plea came as former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was found guilty of eight charges in a separate financial fraud trial in Virginia, stemming from a federal investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016

US media reported that the latest legal developments could pressure Democrats to launch impeachment hearings should they win a congressional majority in the November mid-term elections

"This is a very big deal," Neal Katyal, a US solicitor general in the Obama administration and now a white-collar criminal lawyer, was quoted as saying by "The President of the United States has been directly implicated in federal crimes, and implicated not by some enemy but by his own personal lawyer," Mr Katyal said

Republican strategist Rob Stutzman told impeachment considerations would now "define the midterms"

"It's inescapable now that Democrats can legitimately raise that issue," said Mr Stutzman

Mr Trump angrily lashed out at Mr Cohen late Wednesday night (AEST), claiming the campaign finance violations his former "fixer" pleaded guilty to in New York on earlier that day were "not a crime", despite prosecutors and Mr Cohen agreeing that they were

 In a separate tweet, Mr Trump said: "If anyone is looking for a good lawyer, I would strongly suggest that you don't retain the services of Michael Cohen"

In a tweet in stark contrast to those referring to  Mr Cohen, Mr Trump said: "I feel very badly for Paul Manafort and his wonderful family

'Justice' took a 12-year old tax case, among other things, applied tremendous pressure on him and, unlike Michael Cohen, he refused to 'break' – make up stories in order to get a 'deal

' Such respect for a brave man!"-with agencies

For more infomation >> Donald Trump impeachment threat as Cohen ready to Meuller - Duration: 4:53.

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White House, Trump eyeing Montana return during upcoming midterm swing - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> White House, Trump eyeing Montana return during upcoming midterm swing - Duration: 0:41.

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Man Accused Of Threatening To Shoot Trump May Be Back In Pennsylvania - Duration: 1:29.

For more infomation >> Man Accused Of Threatening To Shoot Trump May Be Back In Pennsylvania - Duration: 1:29.

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Trump Slaps Back Hard In Action For Mollie – 'It Should Have Never Happened' - Duration: 5:10.

For more infomation >> Trump Slaps Back Hard In Action For Mollie – 'It Should Have Never Happened' - Duration: 5:10.

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Democratic Senator Says That Trump Can Be Indicted For Crimes - Duration: 1:13.

>> Strong words that you heard

from senator Blumenthal.

Joining us live.

Thank you for joining us.

>> Good evening to you.

>> You said that everything

should be on the table when it

comes to trump and that is

including indictments what does

that mean?

>> That means that the president

of the United States is

potentially indictable.

Right now, he has been named as

an unindicted co-conspirator

which means there is credible

and significant evidence against

him in connection with the

crimes committed by Michael

Cohen in those last two, seven

and eight counts.

If he was anything except

president of the United States

he would be under indictment

now.

No constitutional bar of the

president of the United States

being indicted.

There is a serious legal

question about whether it can be

done and I would be in favor of

postponing the trial.

But indictment should be done as

a potential remedy.

And we need to allow the special

For more infomation >> Democratic Senator Says That Trump Can Be Indicted For Crimes - Duration: 1:13.

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Lifting sanctions will only come after North Korea denuclearizes: Trump - Duration: 2:14.

The United States continues to urge North Korea to take steps towards denuclearization...

*if it wants relief from crippling sanctions.

This comes as the Trump administration slapped three sets of unilateral sanctions on firms

linked to the regime in August alone.

Lee Ji-won has more.

U.S. President Donald Trump is once again reiterating that the denuclearization of North

Korea must come before sanctions relief.

President Trump made the remarks at a rally in West Virginia this week, just hours after

the U.S. Treasury Department announced new sanctions on Russian shipping companies for

violating North Korea-related UN Security Council resolutions.

He also recalled his historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in June,...

once again highlighting the "good chemistry" he has with Kim.

Trump reminded his supporters about how much the situation has changed, from the 'extremely

hostile' start he had with Kim, and the grave concerns that there might be a war,... to

the North's current cessation of missile or rocket launches.

But President Trump stressed that they will have to see what happens.

He said he hasn't yet lifted massive U.S. sanctions on North Korea, but he wants to

take them off quickly.

However, he said for that to happen,... the North Koreans must first abandon their nuclear

arsenal.

Just this month, Washington slapped three sets of sanctions on foreign companies and

individuals linked to North Korea to further squeeze Pyongyang, demonstrating the Trump

administration's strong determination to increase pressure on the regime until it fully denuclearizes.

And on this, Japan has reaffirmed its support as well.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said during a briefing on Wednesday

that President Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had a phone call earlier that day,

where the two leaders expressed their commitment to maintaining strong sanctions on North Korea.

Sanders also said the two leaders look forward to seeing each other at the UN General Assembly

in September, and Trump will continue holding important conversations with Washington's

allies.

Lee Ji-won, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Lifting sanctions will only come after North Korea denuclearizes: Trump - Duration: 2:14.

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What Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen's Convictions Could Mean for President Trump - News Today - Duration: 8:50.

 Paul Manafort's conviction and Michael Cohen's guilty plea have been described as a "double whammy" blow to President Donald Trump — and sparked fresh calls for his impeachment

 Former Obama ethics chief Norm Eisen described the outcomes in a tweet as "the worst hour of Trump's entire presidency — no, make that entire life

"  Jonathan Turley, an NBC legal analyst and law professor at George Washington University, told MSNBC on Wednesday that the news "couldn't be worse" for the president

 And ousted Trump aide of the hour Omarosa Manigault Newman declared Cohen's guilty plea "the beginning of the end" of Trump's presidency

 But despite these ominous predictions — and the fact that Cohen implicated the president in a federal crime — many experts say it's unlikely that Trump will face any legal consequences while he's still in office

 Cohen, Trump's former personal attorney and self-described "fixer," pleaded guilty on Tuesday to eight criminal counts, including tax fraud, false statements to a bank, and campaign finance violations related to his work for Trump

 Cohen may have implicated Trump by stating that "a candidate for federal office" (which is universally understood to be Trump) directed payments prior to the 2016 presidential election to two women who claim to have had affairs with him, porn star Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal

(Trump has denied the affairs.) Cohen admitted to a federal judge that he made the payments "for the purpose of influencing the election

"  White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Wednesday that Trump "did nothing wrong" and there are "no charges against him

"  CNN reported that Trump is likely not in legal jeopardy, noting that special counsel Robert Mueller's office has "apparently" told the president's legal team that they will adhere to Justice Department regulations saying a sitting president can't be indicted

 CNN argued that impeachment is a more likely threat to Trump.  Joshua Dressler, a law professor Ohio State University, agrees — but still believes that the president probably won't be impeached

 Dressler tells Vox that Cohen's admission that he made the payments " 'at the direction of a candidate for federal office,' clearly implicates the president in those campaign violations

" But it may not matter.  "If he were not a sitting president this would constitute grounds for indictment on those charges," Dressler said

"As a sitting president this constitutes, if Congress wishes to do so, impeachable offenses

But, as we know, impeachment is a political rather than a legal concept, and it would seem pretty clear that nothing will occur with the current Congress

"  Sol Wisenberg, who conducted grand jury questioning of former President Bill Clinton as deputy independent counsel during the Whitewater investigation, tells the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that Cohen's plea deal leads Trump "closer to ultimate impeachment proceedings, particularly if the Democrats take back the House

"  But most Democrats have been reluctant to call for Trump's impeachment, especially those running in crucial midterm races, The Washington Post reports

 "I don't want to see a two-year distraction," said Susan Wild, a Democratic nominee favored to win a key Republican-held House seat in Pennsylvania tells the Post

"I think, honestly, impeachment proceedings would obviously derail getting other things done in Congress

"  The Post also reports that most Democrats have come to believe that "moral revulsion with political leaders is often only a deciding issue for voters who enjoy a level of economic security to look beyond their immediate needs" — a lesson they learned from Hillary Clinton's 2016 tactics against Trump

 The question of what's next for Trump also depends on what Cohen might tell special counsel Robert S

Mueller III, who is investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election and Trump's ties to Russia

 After Cohen's guilty plea on Tuesday, his attorney, Lanny Davis, went on a media blitz in which he repeatedly suggested that Cohen has information that would be of interest to Mueller — specifically about the hacking of the Democratic National Convention during the 2016 election, and about Trump's son Donald Trump Jr

's mid-campaign meeting with a Russian lawyer who promised dirt on Hillary Clinton

 On MSNBC's Rachel Maddow Show, Davis said that Cohen had "knowledge about the computer crime of hacking and whether or not Mr

Trump knew ahead of time about that crime and even cheered it on."  He elaborated to The Washington Post, "A conspiracy to commit a crime becomes a crime if there's one overt act — meaning you do anything to implement the crime

If there is a conversation and a plan for there to be dirt on Hillary Clinton, and then someone knows the way you're willing to get the dirt is a Russian agent called WikiLeaks

 . . and then WikiLeaks hacks into an email account, which is a crime, then you have committed a crime of conspiracy

"  If Trump knew in advance about the meeting, he could be accused of having participated in a criminal conspiracy, the Post reports

 But, the newspaper adds, "It's very unlikely Trump would be indicted on such a charge, especially given how speculative it is

"  Meanwhile, though Manafort's conviction on eight felony counts of bank and tax fraud does not directly implicate Trump, it could strengthen the special counsel investigation and prompt Manafort to strike a deal and agree to cooperate with investigators, the Post says

 "The combination of the Manafort conviction and the guilty plea by Michael Cohen creates a legal maelstrom for the president's lawyers, who now have to do battle on two fronts, fending off unrelated charges that both involve individuals who were at one time close to the president," Robert Mintz, a former federal prosecutor who now works at the firm McCarter & English, tells the Post

 Timothy Belevetz, a former federal prosecutor now with the firm Holland & Knight, called the Manafort verdict "an important milestone" for Mueller

 "So far, the office has charged more than 30 individuals and has secured a number of guilty pleas, which is not insignificant," he said

"This is a big win for the special counsel."

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