Bannon cooperating with feds?

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[FONT=&quot][h=1]'Bannon may already be cooperating with Mueller': tell-all book shifts frame of Russia inquiry[/h]


[FONT=&quot]In Fire and Fury, Steve Bannon is specific about what he regards as the most dangerous aspect of the investigation: Jared Kushner’s ties to Deutsche Bank
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Steve Bannon and Jared Kushner in the wake of Trump’s presidential victory last year. In the book, Wolff writes that Bannon said: ‘The Kushner shit is greasy. They’re going to go right through that.’ Photograph: Evan Vucci/APEd Pilkington in New York

@edpilkington


[FONT=&quot]Thu 4 Jan ‘18 14.11 ESTLast modified on Fri 5 Jan ‘18 03.15 EST[/FONT]




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One of the many telling vignettes in Michael Wolff’s book is the sight of Steve Bannon, then White House chief strategist, pacing the West Wing, openly dispensing odds on Donald Trump’s chances of surviving in office.

3243.jpg

[FONT=&quot][h=1]Fire and Fury released early in defiance of attempt to ban tell-all Trump book[/h][/FONT]


[FONT=&quot]Read more[/FONT]



Bannon gave Trump a probability of a third that he might limp to the finish line because of Democratic incompetence; a third that he would be pushed from office under the 25th amendment on grounds of mental incapability; and a third that he would be impeached.
That a man who was for many months Trump’s right-hand man would brazenly give out such doom-laden predictions is remarkable enough. But letting the world know of it via Wolff could make it a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The most explosive aspect of Bannon’s take, revealed by Fire and Fury, is Trump’s handling – or rather mishandling – of the Russia investigation that rages around him. Assuming Wolff’s account to be accurate (and Bannon has said nothing so far to suggest otherwise) the former chief strategist considered Trump entirely out of his depth with regard to special counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry into possible links between Russia and the Trump team.

On a practical level, Trump did not have the “discipline to navigate a tough investigation”, Wolff writes, nor the savvy to bring on powerful lawyers. Most seriously, Trump was, in Bannon’s estimation, unable to grasp “how much Mueller had on him and his family”.
“He doesn’t necessarily see what’s coming,” Bannon is quoted as saying.
We now know from the Guardian’s account of excerpts of the book that Bannon believes the June 2016 meeting between Trump’s son and Russians bearing promises of dirt on Hillary Clinton to have been “treasonous”. We also know that Bannon puts the chances of Donald Jr failing to have informed his father of the encounter at “zero”.
That is not evidence that would satisfy as meticulous a prosecutor as Mueller, but it does shift the frame of the Russia inquiry. Trump may try to belittle Bannon’s involvement with his campaign and subsequent time in the White House, scoffing that he had “little to do with our historic victory”, but few will buy that.
“Bannon was an insider in the campaign at the highest level, and in the White House all the way to last August,” said Richard Painter, chief White House ethics lawyer under George W Bush. “He was talking to the president constantly – I can’t imagine Trump not confiding in him, including over the Russia inquiry.”
That in turn raises the possibility that Bannon might cooperate. Certainly, there is no love lost between him and Trump family members, notably the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.
“Bannon may already be cooperating with Mueller for all we know,” Painter said. “He has no incentive to cover up for Trump, or his family members.”
Play Video


[FONT=&quot]1:18[/FONT]



Fire and Fury: Key explosive quotes from the new Trump book - videoAll of which increases the significance of Bannon’s interpretation of the Russia investigation as it reaches possibly critical stages. Where he places his focus is clear from the book: the financial doings of Trump and his immediate family.

When Trump gave an interview to the New York Times last July in which he warned Mueller not to delve into his family’s finances, Bannon’s response was scathing. Wolff writes: “‘Ehhh … ehhh … ehhh!’ screeched Bannon, making the sound of an emergency alarm. ‘Don’t look here! Let’s tell a prosecutor what not to look at!’”
Bannon is specific about what he regards as the most dangerous aspect of the Mueller inquiry: “It goes through Deutsche Bank and all the Kushner shit. The Kushner shit is greasy. They’re going to go right through that.”
Last month it was revealed that federal prosecutors are looking into Kushner’s ties to Deutsche Bank. Those ties include the $285m borrowed from a bank which has been implicated in Russian money-laundering scandals to refinance his holding of part of the old New York Times building in Manhattan. Last July, the Guardian disclosed that Kushner bought the property from a Soviet-born oligarch whose company was named in a high-profile New York money-laundering case.
“Watch Kushner” and “watch Deutsche Bank” seem to be two of the takeaways from this extraordinary chapter in an exceptional presidency.
3500.jpg

[FONT=&quot][h=1]Jared Kushner sealed real estate deal with oligarch's firm cited in money-laundering case[/h][/FONT]


[FONT=&quot]Read more[/FONT]



The book also gives an account of events on board Air Force One, in which a misleading public statement was prepared to explain the Don Jr meeting in Trump Tower with the Russians.
As was previously known, Trump took control of the statement, insisting the meeting was exclusively about the adoption of Russian children. In fact, the Russian contingent offered incriminating intelligence on Clinton, a crucial detail that was not mentioned but which became quickly public after the email chaininvolving Don Jr was released.
Wolff gives a more complete rendition, again assuming the accuracy of his account. He writes that the entire White House communications team was relegated to the back of the plane while Trump was up front composing a public statement that could be construed as an attempted cover-up, exposing the president to legal peril.
“It used to hurt my feelings when I saw them running around doing things that were my job,” Sean Spicer, the then White House director of communications, is quoted as saying. “Now I’m glad to be out of the loop.”
The person who remained in the loop was Hope Hicks, currently a successor of Spicer’s as communications chief.
Bannon is said by Wolff to have seen Hicks as “nothing more than a hapless presidential enabler” and flunky for “Jarvanka” – Kushner and his wife, Trump’s daughter Ivanka.
In the fallout from the Trump Tower meeting and false statement, Wolff reports a fight between Bannon and Hicks in the cabinet room. “You don’t know what you are doing,” Bannon is said to have shouted. “You don’t know how much trouble you are in … You are as dumb as a stone!”
The pair, Wolff writes, never spoke to each other again.



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'Bannon may already be cooperating with Mueller': tell-all book shifts frame of Russia inquiry




In Fire and Fury, Steve Bannon is specific about what he regards as the most dangerous aspect of the investigation: Jared Kushner’s ties to Deutsche Bank











Steve Bannon and Jared Kushner in the wake of Trump’s presidential victory last year. In the book, Wolff writes that Bannon said: ‘The Kushner shit is greasy. They’re going to go right through that.’ Photograph: Evan Vucci/APEd Pilkington in New York

@edpilkington


Thu 4 Jan ‘18 14.11 ESTLast modified on Fri 5 Jan ‘18 03.15 EST




  • View more sharing options


Shares


2,158





One of the many telling vignettes in Michael Wolff’s book is the sight of Steve Bannon, then White House chief strategist, pacing the West Wing, openly dispensing odds on Donald Trump’s chances of surviving in office.

3243.jpg

Fire and Fury released early in defiance of attempt to ban tell-all Trump book




Read more



Bannon gave Trump a probability of a third that he might limp to the finish line because of Democratic incompetence; a third that he would be pushed from office under the 25th amendment on grounds of mental incapability; and a third that he would be impeached.
That a man who was for many months Trump’s right-hand man would brazenly give out such doom-laden predictions is remarkable enough. But letting the world know of it via Wolff could make it a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The most explosive aspect of Bannon’s take, revealed by Fire and Fury, is Trump’s handling – or rather mishandling – of the Russia investigation that rages around him. Assuming Wolff’s account to be accurate (and Bannon has said nothing so far to suggest otherwise) the former chief strategist considered Trump entirely out of his depth with regard to special counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry into possible links between Russia and the Trump team.

On a practical level, Trump did not have the “discipline to navigate a tough investigation”, Wolff writes, nor the savvy to bring on powerful lawyers. Most seriously, Trump was, in Bannon’s estimation, unable to grasp “how much Mueller had on him and his family”.
“He doesn’t necessarily see what’s coming,” Bannon is quoted as saying.
We now know from the Guardian’s account of excerpts of the book that Bannon believes the June 2016 meeting between Trump’s son and Russians bearing promises of dirt on Hillary Clinton to have been “treasonous”. We also know that Bannon puts the chances of Donald Jr failing to have informed his father of the encounter at “zero”.
That is not evidence that would satisfy as meticulous a prosecutor as Mueller, but it does shift the frame of the Russia inquiry. Trump may try to belittle Bannon’s involvement with his campaign and subsequent time in the White House, scoffing that he had “little to do with our historic victory”, but few will buy that.
“Bannon was an insider in the campaign at the highest level, and in the White House all the way to last August,” said Richard Painter, chief White House ethics lawyer under George W Bush. “He was talking to the president constantly – I can’t imagine Trump not confiding in him, including over the Russia inquiry.”
That in turn raises the possibility that Bannon might cooperate. Certainly, there is no love lost between him and Trump family members, notably the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.
“Bannon may already be cooperating with Mueller for all we know,” Painter said. “He has no incentive to cover up for Trump, or his family members.”
Play Video


1:18



Fire and Fury: Key explosive quotes from the new Trump book - videoAll of which increases the significance of Bannon’s interpretation of the Russia investigation as it reaches possibly critical stages. Where he places his focus is clear from the book: the financial doings of Trump and his immediate family.

When Trump gave an interview to the New York Times last July in which he warned Mueller not to delve into his family’s finances, Bannon’s response was scathing. Wolff writes: “‘Ehhh … ehhh … ehhh!’ screeched Bannon, making the sound of an emergency alarm. ‘Don’t look here! Let’s tell a prosecutor what not to look at!’”
Bannon is specific about what he regards as the most dangerous aspect of the Mueller inquiry: “It goes through Deutsche Bank and all the Kushner shit. The Kushner shit is greasy. They’re going to go right through that.”
Last month it was revealed that federal prosecutors are looking into Kushner’s ties to Deutsche Bank. Those ties include the $285m borrowed from a bank which has been implicated in Russian money-laundering scandals to refinance his holding of part of the old New York Times building in Manhattan. Last July, the Guardian disclosed that Kushner bought the property from a Soviet-born oligarch whose company was named in a high-profile New York money-laundering case.
“Watch Kushner” and “watch Deutsche Bank” seem to be two of the takeaways from this extraordinary chapter in an exceptional presidency.
3500.jpg

Jared Kushner sealed real estate deal with oligarch's firm cited in money-laundering case




Read more



The book also gives an account of events on board Air Force One, in which a misleading public statement was prepared to explain the Don Jr meeting in Trump Tower with the Russians.
As was previously known, Trump took control of the statement, insisting the meeting was exclusively about the adoption of Russian children. In fact, the Russian contingent offered incriminating intelligence on Clinton, a crucial detail that was not mentioned but which became quickly public after the email chaininvolving Don Jr was released.
Wolff gives a more complete rendition, again assuming the accuracy of his account. He writes that the entire White House communications team was relegated to the back of the plane while Trump was up front composing a public statement that could be construed as an attempted cover-up, exposing the president to legal peril.
“It used to hurt my feelings when I saw them running around doing things that were my job,” Sean Spicer, the then White House director of communications, is quoted as saying. “Now I’m glad to be out of the loop.”
The person who remained in the loop was Hope Hicks, currently a successor of Spicer’s as communications chief.
Bannon is said by Wolff to have seen Hicks as “nothing more than a hapless presidential enabler” and flunky for “Jarvanka” – Kushner and his wife, Trump’s daughter Ivanka.
In the fallout from the Trump Tower meeting and false statement, Wolff reports a fight between Bannon and Hicks in the cabinet room. “You don’t know what you are doing,” Bannon is said to have shouted. “You don’t know how much trouble you are in … You are as dumb as a stone!”
The pair, Wolff writes, never spoke to each other again.




Wolff is a habitual liar he prints hearsay and gossip, and the snowflakes rush to buy his book and make him a mulitmillion fortune, he laughs all the way to the bank while the snowflakes read the book in their safe place and enjoy it more than therapy dogs and cry ins.
 

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[FONT=&quot]In his book’s introduction, Wolff wrote: “Many of the accounts of what has happened in the Trump White House are in conflict with one another; many, in Trumpian fashion, are baldly untrue.

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[FONT=&quot]“Those conflicts, and that looseness with the truth, if not with reality itself, are an elemental thread of the book.

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[FONT=&quot]“Sometimes I have let the players offer their versions, in turn allowing the reader to judge them.

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[FONT=&quot]“In other instances I have, through a consistency in accounts and through sources I have come to trust, settled on a version of events I believe to be true.”[/FONT]
 

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[FONT=&quot]Tony Blair, the “pretty straight sort of guy” himself, also popped up on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Thursday, denying the details of his own guest appearance in the book.

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[FONT=&quot]Wolff had said the former Prime Minister had gone to the White House in February 2017 “angling” for a Middle East adviser job. Mr Blair said this was “complete fabrication, from beginning to end”. [/FONT]
 

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[FONT=&quot]The President’s billionaire chum Thomas Barrack Jr has denied ever telling a friend that Trump is “not only crazy [but] stupid”. Ex-White House adviser Katie Walsh has disputed a comment attributed to her in the book that dealing with Trump was “like trying to figure out what a child wants”.


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[FONT=&quot]And they are hardly the first to question Wolff’s ability to quote accurately.


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[FONT=&quot]Wolff, 64, has written for a string of prestigious publications and won the National Magazine Award for commentary in 2002 and 2004.


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[FONT=&quot]But along the way questions have been raised about whether what he says is always 100 per cent accurate. Sometimes Wolff himself appears to have fuelled the questioning.


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[FONT=&quot]In his first best-seller Burn Rate, about his time as a 1990s internet entrepreneur, he confessed to stalling bankers by making up a story about his father having open-heart surgery.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]“How many fairly grievous lies had I told?” he wrote. “How many moral lapses had I committed? How many ethical breaches had I fallen into?


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[FONT=&quot]“Like many another financial conniver, I was in a short-term mode.”


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[FONT=&quot]And after the book was published, it was reported that a dozen people disputed the way they were quoted in it.


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[FONT=&quot]Wolff, though, got a job writing a media column at New Yorkmagazine. Pretty soon book editor Judith Regan was disputing nearly every line of the column Wolff wrote about her, saying she hadn’t spoken to him in 30 years.[/FONT]
 

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[FONT=&quot]Other complaints about misquoting followed.



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[FONT=&quot]Now The Washington Post is drawing its readers’ attention to a New Republic profile of Wolff, written in 2004 when he had just won his first National Magazine Award.


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[FONT=&quot]In it, the New Republic writer Michelle Cottle stated, pretty bluntly: “Much to the annoyance of Wolff’s critics, the scenes in his columns aren’t recreated so much as created – springing from Wolff’s imagination rather than from actual knowledge of events.


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[FONT=&quot]“Even Wolff acknowledges that conventional reporting isn’t his bag. Rather, he absorbs the atmosphere and gossip swirling around him at cocktail parties, on the street, and especially during those long lunches at Michael’s.”


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[FONT=&quot]Intriguingly, given what the Fire and Fury author now says about his semi-permanent seat on the West Wing couch, Cottle quoted an editor who has worked with Wolff as saying: “His great gift is the appearance of intimate access. He is adroit at making the reader think that he has spent hours and days with his subject, when in fact he may have spent no time at all.”[/FONT]
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  • Well,...SOMEBODY'S rattled! Holy cow!​
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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There's nothing illegal to share, EVERYBODY is COOPERATING
 

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Leftists are children. Day after day it's "I'm telling mom!" Or "You're a big meanie!" Or "You're a pooh face!"

This thread is a classic example.
 

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Sloppy Steve Bannon.
Little Rocket Man
Pocahontas
Jeff Flakey
Al 'Frankenstien'
Liddle' Bob Corker
Wacky Congresswoman Wilson
Crooked Hillary
Little Marco
Lyin’ Ted
Low Energy Jeb
1 for 38
Crazy Bernie
Crying Chuck
Sleepy Eyes
Dumb as a Rock Mika
Crazy Megyn
Psycho Joe



Maga+brothers+aftermath+brilredbig1counterpetition+to+ensure+donald+trump+receives+the_5aa194_6085980.jpg
 

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