John McCain's Farewell Comforted Us In Our Hour of Need by marilyn salenger

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0

In the days following his death, Senator John McCain was able to do what no individual political figure has been able to do during these past two years. He gave us a period of mourning that jarred our senses back to believing in the better part of our souls. He gave our collective lives the gift of hope, even if for a moment.          

In McCain's final letter to Americans he wrote:

"We are 325 million opinionated, vociferous individuals. We argue and compete and sometimes even vilify each other in our raucous public debates. But we have always had so much more in common with each other than in disagreement. If only we remember that and give each other the benefit of the presumption that we all love our country, we will get through these challenging times. We will come through them stronger than before. We always do."

Strength. It's what carried Senator McCain through his own life's journey, and what he encouraged us to think about in the week after his final days. It superseded politics or political party at a time when we thought nothing could. His personal story of being a combat fighter pilot shot down during the Vietnam war and held as a prisoner of war for five years, had all the makings of legendary before his death. But the postscript of his meticulously pre-planned funerals will now be etched into modern times. 

The Republican Senator from Arizona brought us together again, a feat that could only be described as Herculean at this point in time. There wasn't one large funeral, but multiple steps along the way that made us feel as if Senator McCain was paying us respect, as we sought to pay him ours. A unique thread of determined purpose that often broke with tradition was unveiled over days.

So much was personal in McCain’s farewell, even if you never met him, it was hard not to have some part of the week touch you. He bid farewell to his beloved Arizona, lying in state at its Capitol in Phoenix.

Sharing the most private of times with the public becomes part of the way of life for many political families, but it's never easy. There was enormous poignancy in the impromptu moments that continually brought us back to the man himself as a husband, father and grandfather. The image of Cindy McCain resting her head on his casket in the Arizona Capitol was heartbreaking. Anyone who has experienced loss understood.

When his time at the Capitol had ended, Senator McCain exited in a way that could only bring a smile and was definitely unique to the man. Music began to play unexpectedly with Frank Sinatra singing "My Way". Of course.

We learned which public figures he personally asked to speak at all of the services in his honor, and which one he did not. The funeral at the Phoenix North Baptist Church began McCain's last shout out across the political aisle with bipartisan becoming the mantra of his farewell.

First it was former Vice President and longtime friend Joe Biden who identified himself as he began to speak, "My name is Joe Biden. I'm a Democrat and I loved John McCain." He continued to tell us,  "It wasn’t about politics with John. You could disagree on substance. It was about the underlying values that animated everything John did." Biden spoke of McCain's call for civility and respect in the era of partisanship and divisiveness. "John believed so deeply and so passionately in the soul of America."

As the former Navy pilot left Phoenix and began his last flight from the airport that he had used over his many years en route to Washington, D.C., we heard air traffic controllers giving their directions, and then softly adding a personal farewell to the man they had guided on so many flights. “We’d like to say goodbye to a man who has meant so much…And there they go…we’ll direct them back to Andrews Air Force base.”

Senator John McCain became the 32nd person in history to lay in state in the Rotunda of our nation's Capital. His colleagues in Congress paid their respects to a man who had spent over three decades in the U.S. Senate. At his pointed request, and contrary to tradition, both Democrat and Republican leaders of the Senate and House of Representatives jointly placed wreaths around his casket. 

The final public tribute took place at Washington's National Cathedral. It was filled to capacity with invited guests, including three former Presidents of the United States. Bill Clinton, George Bush and Barack Obama all came together to honor a man who was both opponent and ally. 

Every funeral service has its eulogies, but never had a United States Senator asked two men who defeated him in his presidential runs, to address those gathered in mourning. John McCain did just that. As President Obama said, "What better way to get a last laugh than to make George (Bush) and I say nice things about him to a national audience. And most of all, it showed a largeness of spirit, an ability to see past differences in search of common ground." President Bush added, "John is the first to tell you he was not a perfect man but he dedicated his life to national ideals that are as perfect as men and women have yet conceived."

Since 2016, we as a country have, in large part, been looking for someone to help lift us up from the depths brought upon us by the actions our current president. It sadly took the death of the Senator John McCain to help us pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off and realize once again a greater good benefits us all. With all that lay ahead in coming weeks, we need to vividly remember what has taken place during the last week of August 2018 and the feelings it inspired.

 

That Numbing Feeling About Washington and Trump by marilyn salenger

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0

It's easy to become numb to all that is emanating out of Washington. In one week President Trump's focus went from Russia and Putin to Iran, with Korea hanging in the background. While trade policies swirled and too many separated immigrant children remain separated, a Supreme Court Judicial nominee tried to gain favor, former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort's trial approached and former Trump attorney Michael Cohen began to indicate cooperation with federal authorities. A thousand crises a minute. Any one of these issues in any other presidency would be a major one. 

It is not the time to let any of this get lost in a blur of mind fog. That's what Trump would like to have happen as the pieces begin to come together that could burst his self-made bubble of invincibility. Trump's passionate love of money and often careless disregard for the consequences of how he gets it, and how he uses it, are reaching a moment of potential critical exposure.

Money. It has always been what Donald Trump appears to care about more than anything else. His public face of enormous success has often been shadowed by periodic financial troubles, including bankruptcies, that put his so-called financial empire at risk of collapse.

Why should we care now? Because Trump never fully divested himself of ownership of The Trump Organization when he became president. While it’s supposedly run by his two sons, the President of the United States continues to profit from The Trump Organization bringing his personal business right along with him into the White House. 

Trump unabashedly and proudly opened the high-end Trump International Hotel a few blocks from the White House shortly before he took office, retaining full financial involvement. Trump's Washington, D.C. hotel is frequented by foreign government lobbyists, organizations with a myriad of domestic business interests, and those who could be seen as trying to gain favor from the president. In 2017, Trump reportedly earned $40.4 million from his local hotel as he sat close by running our government.

But the days of throwing ethics to the wind may finally be catching up with the president. Earlier this week a judge ruled for a second time that Trump must face a lawsuit accusing him of improperly profiting from his Washington hotel. The judge stated: “A number of foreign governments” have “patronized or have expressed a definite intention to patronize the hotel, some of which have indicated that they are doing so precisely because of the president’s association with it." Lawyers representing the District of Columbia and the state of Maryland claim this violates the Emoluments Clause. Their legal discovery in the case could include a demand for Trump's infamous tax returns.

The Emoluments Clause of the Constitution has come front and center during the Trump presidency because of the flagrant flaunting of his business dealings that remain a personal source of cash flow. The Emoluments Clause was designed to prevent even the slightest appearance of corruption. It states:

“No Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them [the United States], shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.”

Trump remains the first post-Watergate President not to release his tax returns. By not releasing them, he has fanned the flames of curiosity. Thousands of reporters, legal minds and the rest of us are left wondering if our president has been guilty of illegal financial transactions that could compromise our country.

Which leads us to the increasingly important upcoming trial of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort. It will be the first time evidence gathered by special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Russian meddling of the 2016 election will be made public. Many issues could prove to have parallels to Trump's handling of his own finances. In part, both men received Russian money for their business ventures. It's always been about the payoff, in one form or another, for Manafort and Trump. Look ahead to hear about where Manafort deposited money. Tax evasion. Money laundering. Greed and arrogance. 

We can move right along to Michael Cohen, who until recently was Trump's attorney and self-proclaimed "fixer." Just what Cohen has fixed and what he knows has prompted its own Federal investigation.

The first bomb was dropped when Cohen's attorney, Lanny Davis, released an audio tape made by Cohen while he was speaking to Trump. The conversation allowed us to hear the two men talking about setting up a separate corporation, a Limited Liability Corporation, to deal with payment to former Playboy playmate Karen McDougal. The money would be used, we hear on tape, to keep an alleged affair between Trump and McDougal quiet shortly before the 2016 election.

Nothing appears clean and separate when it comes to Trump. It's been reported that another LLC was set up to deal with porn star Stormy Daniel's relationship with Trump. It reportedly received money from a Russian oligarch. Both Trump and Cohen have numerous LLC corporations that provide little, if any, knowledge about their functions and finances.

The scenario keeps coming back to money, Russia and politics. The threads remain woven throughout Trump's presidency. Being honest with the American people from the beginning has never been his style. 

Trust in special counsel Robert Muller has, by necessity, become a new motto.

Robert F. Kennedy: Personal Recollections by marilyn salenger

From the Private Collection of Marilyn Salenger

From the Private Collection of Marilyn Salenger

 

                                                   

The first time I saw Senator Robert Kennedy was September of 1966. Our country was in chaos as the war in Vietnam raged, and race riots and racial divides filled our streets and our lives. Tension permeated the air on a near daily basis as many fought not to suffocate. I was three months into my first job as a television news reporter in Cincinnati, Ohio when Kennedy arrived in town to speak to a large outdoor evening rally. His appearance became my assignment.

The power of the impression Kennedy made on me that night remains vivid in my mind 52 years later. His face was focused as his eyes swept across the crowd. He was making each individual feel as if he was talking to them personally about the issues confronting their lives. He made me feel as if he was talking to me. 

Two years later I left the news business and went to work as a volunteer for Senator Kennedy's presidential campaign. Operating out of the Chicago Kennedy for President office, my home town area of northern Indiana became my base as I settled in heading up the campaign's speaker's bureau. The Indiana primary was a critical must win election to propel Kennedy's candidacy forward and beat his opponents, Senator Eugene McCarthy (D-Minnesota) and Indiana Governor Richard Branigan.

The politics of the state had always been split by its regions. Gary, Indiana had just elected Richard Hatcher the second black mayor of a major U.S. city. The turf was familiar to me having grown up in its ethnic melting pot communities, as were the racial issues that had arisen. Bobby Kennedy needed to put together a strong coalition of black and white voters in order to win.

My campaign days morphed into serving as a bridge between Kennedy's New York advisors and the newly elected Mayor. The New Yorkers sometimes arrived a bit too heavy handed for the locals, and I somehow seemed to help them work through some of their issues. It was an amazing way for a 24-year-old to learn how a presidential campaign was run. In our small store front location and around the country there was an intensity of passionate commitment to elect the man who sought a "Newer World".

Among the many of Robert Kennedy's gift's was his ability to empower people to work on effectuating positive change. He was truly inspiring. Kennedy's focus on equal rights, equal opportunity and hope for our future became our focus. He was a man who quoted scholars but spoke to best of our human spirit.

His victory in the Indiana primary propelled him on to California to claim victory once again. I was in San Francisco with the campaign at an Oakland rally the night before an assassin's bullet struck. Watching the election results, seeing him shot and hearing the news of his death in those early morning hours of June 6, 1968 created overwhelming feelings that were beyond those of personal loss. We knew nothing would ever be the same.

On June 12, I received a letter from Richard Wade, a University of Chicago professor, who headed up the Chicago Kennedy for President office: 

rfk letter edit.jpg

Robert Kennedy was no ordinary politician. To remember him on this 50th anniversary of his death is to remember the man and the enormous power of his commitment to the words he spoke and all that they meant for the times. He came from great wealth and committed to helping the poor through thought and action. He saw the inequities in our society and chose not to tolerate them but help us begin to rectify them. 

"There are those who look at things the way they are, and ask why… I dream of things that never were and ask why not?” Robert F. Kennedy

The Morning After The Weekend Before: The Royal Wedding And Us by marilyn salenger

Royal wedding.jpg

We didn't know how much we needed it until a wave of calm beauty and love and happiness washed over us as we joined Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in their wedding celebration. Our invitations weren't the engraved ones, but we were invited nonetheless. With the young couple making so many of the wedding plans themselves, we were able to just sit back and marvel at it all. Their joy was simply contagious.

Our times have been so dark here in the U.S. and other parts of the world. Chaos. Crisis. A cacophony of noise creating constant stress. Give me a break from Trump and his trumpeters. A congress that is barely functioning. Guns that create tragedy after tragedy. It's all gotten to be way too much. 

Then Saturday arrived. How could we not want to see Diana and Prince Charles’s youngest son marry the woman of his dreams? A beautiful woman who set herself apart from any other princess-to-be by nature of who she is and the history she would be making. Never had there been a woman of professional status like Meghan Markle marrying into British royalty. Never was a previously divorced woman allowed to marry a British royal in a church wedding. And never had there been a biracial woman allowed to marry a British prince. A biracial woman whose maternal ancestors were slaves. 

The Queen of England blessed Harry and Meghan's union leading to an extraordinary wedding that was both grand and down to earth at the same time. The warmth of the couple radiated amidst a glorious setting. I was one of the reported two billion people worldwide who joined the couple in celebration via whatever screens were available. A collective gratitude is being shared by all of us for having the opportunity to bask from afar in loving happiness. And a moment of peace.

When the wedding ended, I didn't want it to end. That's the way fairytales are. But we know that fairytales are pretend, and what we had just seen was real. 

On the wedding day, CNN gave us morning, noon and night time coverage, but BBC America had them beat. The English network rebroadcast the royal nuptials on Sunday so we didn't have to bid Meghan and Harry such an abrupt farewell after all. Thank goodness. Simply listening to our Sunday morning news programs here at home sent me rushing back to Westminster, happy to be reunited with that blissful moment.

It seems we could use a dose of the Royal wedding every day. If getting back to work on Monday is too sharp a return to reality, take a break and change that site on your computer or your phone. You can see the newlyweds in almost a billion places.

Will Women Be The Ones To Bring Down Trump ? by marilyn salenger

You can't look forward in the presidency of Donald Trump without looking back. Women and real estate have been at the center of Trump’s life for many years. But his New York City playboy life may be catching up with him.

A porn star and former Playboy Playmate could now be the ones to bring down the Trump presidency. Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal have turned the tables on Trump using all the publicity possible to expose their alleged extramarital affairs with the president, as well as the hush money they were paid shortly before the election. The two women claim to have had the affairs with Trump while he was married to his wife Melania.

Attempts to silence Daniels and McDougal have resoundingly failed. The hush money both received became the target of this week's extraordinary FBI raid on Donald Trump's personal attorney’s office and residence. Trump attorney Michael Cohen has admitted paying porn star Stormy Daniels $130,000.00 and negotiating a non-disclosure agreement just weeks before the election.

Former Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal's money came via a deal with the National Enquirer which is owned by Trump friend David Pecker. How much additional money, where it came from, and how many others have been paid by Cohen and Pecker to cover for Trump remains in question. The money trail, using a shell corporation(s) for the purpose of making these payments, raised alerts focusing on Federal finance laws and potential money laundering.

Trump is reportedly seething, but he’s not lashing out directly at Daniels and McDougal. Instead, he chooses to distract us with talk once again of firing Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

Republicans appear to be surprisingly vocal in their warnings to the president about the potential firings of these men. If Trump fires anyone in the chain of command over Mueller, or the Special Counsel himself, talk of a constitutional crisis will begin. 

No matter the serious distractions Trump tries to use, investigations into breaking Federal finance laws and money laundering involving payments to women in his life are not going away.

#trumpindictment #stormydaniels

 

 

 

 

Stop The NRA By Not Allowing Them To Elect Our Politicians by marilyn salenger

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Because I cannot write anymore grief stricken words about the tragedy of the lives lost and lives forever scarred as the result of school shootings, mass shootings and the shootings that take place every day, I am providing you with a list of members of Congress who have taken money from the National Rifle Association, the biggest and most powerful gun lobby in the country.

The National Rifle Association and its affiliates spent approximately $50 million in political advertisements in the 2016 election supporting those who towed their line, and going after Democrats who propose stricter gun laws. $50 million dollars.

Donald Trump was the biggest winner of the NRA's 2016 election advertising, buying Trump's support with $11,438,118 million dollars. They gave $19,756,346 to groups opposing Hillary Clinton.

It's not by chance that Trump didn't call for stricter gun control laws after the horrific school shooting at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida where a semi-automatic rifle was used to kill 17 people and injure 17 others. 

The National Rifel Association has done their best to buy our politicians and prevent stricter gun control regulation. If the only thing that these people understand is money, put your money elsewhere. The names of every politician who accepts money from the NRA is a list that cannot be circulated enough. It has been compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics, a non-profit, non-partisan research group that tracks money in U.S. politics. 

TOP MEMBERS OF CONGRESS WITH HIGHEST AMOUNT OF NRA & AFFILIATE CONTRIBUTIONS IN 2016

Ted Cruz (R, Texas) $360,727

Marco Rubio (R, Florida) $176,030

Paul Ryan (R, Wisconsin) $171,977

Ron Johnson (R, Wisconsin) $165,498

Rand Paul (R, Kentucky) $155,605

Pat Toomey (R, Pennsylvania) $ 79,908

Ryan K. Zinke (R, Montana) $ 79,068

Martha McSally ( R, Arizona) $ 77,063

Todd Young (R, Indiana) $ 73,785

Joe Heck (R, Nevada) $ 68,520

Rob Portman (R, Ohio) $ 64,877

Kelly Ayotte (R, New Hampshire) $ 64,796

Mia Love (R, Utah) $ 63,350

Chuck Grassley (R, Iowa) $ 53,380

Roy Blunt (R, Missouri) $ 49,430

Richard Burr (R, North Carolina) $ 47,300

Kevin McCarthy (R, California) $ 42,000

John McCain (R, Arizona) $ 38,260

A Shutdown: Government Of The People, For The People, By The People by marilyn salenger

President Abraham Lincoln's strong and poignant words delivered in the Gettysburg Address should be ringing across our country as it once again splinters apart. The war we face as Americans today is again an internal war, but this time the foot soldiers are those we elected to represent our country. We have a president and a Republican led Congress who seem to care not for the people as a whole, but choose to challenge our democracy as it was built by appealing only to the interests of a few.

As our government teeters on the edge of a shutdown, President Donald Trump, Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Republican Speaker of the House Paul Ryan look to lay blame everywhere but on themselves. They are the ones to be held responsible for leading the discord and divisions and the tragedy they have made of politics. The misguided are in control of our government, and we the people are paying the price.

While the world watches the dysfunction occurring in Washington, D.C., our country’s stability is questioned near and far. Let's be clear. Children are at the core of the battle in Washington. Families are at the core. Republicans appear unable to come together with Democrats on their behalf. A government shutdown is an excuse to cover all else.

The GOP cannot agree on the money needed to continue funding the Children's Health Insurance Program, CHIP, which provides care for nine million children in need. They cannot agree to continue support of the Dream Act for those immigrant children covered by DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.

These acts have protected approximately one million young people who came to this country illegally as children. They have been protected from deportation because they came here through no fault of their own. Now the children and their families are living day to day with constant heart-wrenching uncertainty needlessly being continued by the president, Congress and its captains.

Will a child be able to have a critical medical procedure? Will a child be forcefully removed from the only country she or he has ever known? Children are being held hostage by the political idiocy taking place in the White House and on Capitol Hill. And so, it seems, are the rest of us.

The man elected president one year ago has turned to a mean and vengeful style of governing, and the Republican party has often followed suit. They are playing dangerous games of brinkmanship while showing little concern for humanity. It is the antithesis of the government that Lincoln worked so hard to reunite.

President Lincoln's words at Gettysburg remain striking in their reminders today:

“Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.”

The current leaders of our country have strayed too far. They have lost the ability walk in the shoes worn by all citizens, and those who came to our shores for a better life. 

 

Oprah's Passion Translates To The Political World by marilyn salenger

Dreamstime image

Dreamstime image

Today, no matter your political persuasion, you cannot ignore Oprah Winfrey. Anyone who watched the Golden Globes saw a presidential candidate who was a tour de force. I hadn't plan to write about Oprah, but it is impossible not to do so. 

As a former broadcaster and political observer of many years, I respectfully say that the timing of Oprah’s entry onto the political stage is as near perfect as a potential candidate could want. The reason the speech she delivered at the Golden Globes is resonating so strongly with so many is because she had the ability to give a speech that's exactly what much of our country has been yearning to hear. Consciously or not.

If you missed it, read it.

Her passionate words spoke to women as well as men, young as well as old, black as well as white, and rich as well as poor. She inclusively pulled us in with heart and smarts. When you can do that, you've hit a political home run. Especially if you're a woman who happens to be black. Especially if you're thinking of running for President of the United States.

Oprah has been masterful in her ability to translate the past tragedies of abuse and poverty in her own life into extraordinary professional success. That couldn't have happened without enormous inner strength, and an instinctive understanding of what it takes to do more than survive. Her success has been based on relatability. No matter how wealthy she has become, or the media empire she has built, or her acting achievements, Oprah has perfected the ability to touch the humanity in people. It's a quality that only the best politicians possess. 

The current state of political affairs in our country is its own tragedy. Leadership is not a guiding light of hope, but rather something that’s creating epic proportions of divisiveness and anger. It speaks of a bleak future that is pulling too many down and lifting too few up.

Is it any wonder that a speech delivered at a Hollywood gathering, one that was able to address the good and the bad while aiming for a better tomorrow, has been received as it has? With the strength of great oratory, Oprah's closing words were met with resounding applause that rang from the entertainment capital to living rooms across the nation:

"In my career, what I've always tried my best to do, whether on television or through film, is to say something about how men and women really behave. To say how we experience shame, how we love and how we rage, how we fail, how we retreat, persevere and how we overcome. I've interviewed and portrayed people who've withstood some of the ugliest things life can throw at you, but the one quality all of them seem to share is an ability to maintain hope for a brighter morning, even during our darkest nights. So I want all the girls watching here, now, to know that a new day is on the horizon! And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men, fighting hard to make sure that they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say "Me too" again."

Oprah Winfrey became the first black woman to receive the Cecil B. DeMille Award bestowed by the Hollywood Foreign Press for outstanding contributions to the world of entertainment. This time it was an award that launched a political career for a woman whose star has risen yet again - if she wants it.

Doug Jones Fit For Office by marilyn salenger

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA2.0

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA2.0

Women's voices were finally heard when they helped pull off an upset Senate victory in Alabama defeating a man accused multiple times of sexual misconduct, Republican Roy Moore, and electing Democrat Doug Jones. Through a deafening bluster of lies and denials emanating from Moore and his chief supporters, Steve Bannon and Donald Trump, one alleged sexual predator was defeated in his attempt to win a seat in the Senate. One more sits in the White House. The state of Alabama has shown Donald Trump an opening to the exit door.

Jones threw our country a life raft at a critical point in time. We have finally begun to ask out loud - how low will we allow ourselves to sink? A known, though I will use the word alleged, child molester was being touted by President Trump and the Republican National Committee as the right man to elect for the Alabama Senate seat.  

We owe a brave woman named Leigh Corfman a debt of gratitude. She was the first woman to come forward with sexual misconduct allegations against candidate Roy Moore. Corfman was 14-years-old when she says 32-year-old Moore "seduced her", initiating a sexual encounter. Moore was an assistant district attorney at the time. That's called child molestation, and the term officially became linked in a Senate election. 

Moore has refuted the accusations made by Corfman as well as those made by eight other brave women who came out with their own stories of sexual misconduct by Moore. Wendy Miller. Debbie Wesson Gibson. Gloria Thacker. Beverly Young Nelson. Tina Johnson. Gena Richardson. Becky Gray. Together with Leigh Corfman, these women became a plague on Roy Moore's house and another window into the depth of sexual harassment and abuse women have endured.

All of Moore's accusers were called liars. Many people in Alabama didn't believe them. Nor did some people around the country. But a majority of Alabama voters decided they had had enough, and pulled off an extraordinary victory defeating Republican Moore in a solidly red state in the deep south. Donald Trump won Alabama in the 2016 presidential election. 

During the campaign, Doug Jones repeatedly referred to the list of Moore's accusers as proof that Moore was unfit for office. Trump and the Republican National Committee didn't see it that way. They chose to ignore women's voices just as they did in the 2016 presidential election. What a difference a year can make.

Trump has his own list of 19 women who’ve accused him of sexual misconduct before he was elected president. He himself spoke of his predatory behavior toward women in the now infamous Access Hollywood tape. The man was unfit for office in 2016. He remains so today. What has changed is the impact of women's voices speaking out against abuse, and being heard.

 

 

The Days of Reckoning Began With Trump Ineptitude by marilyn salenger

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0

Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0

With the indictments and unsealed guilty pleas of Trump campaign associates on October 30, 2017, special counsel Robert Mueller let President Donald Trump know there's no denying facts. Few have been able to previously achieve such a feat. 

Mueller's detailed twelve count indictment against former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and his business partner and campaign associate Rick Gates include conspiracy against the United States, money laundering and being unregistered foreign agents. Both men pled not guilty to the charges largely emanating from their work with the pro-Russian Ukraine government.

But It was the guilty plea of George Papadopoulos, a former Trump campaign foreign policy advisor, that has opened the floodgates of information further than anyone expected at this point. Papadopoulos has admitted lying to the FBI. His cooperation with investigators is revealing critical details of the attempts by Russian intelligence services to contact him in an effort to gain influence in the campaign. Potential collusion is on the books. 

Who's swamp is being drained now? As a man who prided himself on being a brilliant businessman and Washington outsider who knows how to get things done, President Trump has seemingly failed himself. His choices as a candidate laid the groundwork for a presidency now forever married to the first criminal charges and admission of guilt in the investigation of Russia's meddling in the 2016 election. If he thought he could escape it by firing James Comey, he was wrong.

Donald Trump put together a campaign team who either knew less than he did about presidential politics, or whose questionable pasts were well known to anyone who cared to look deeply. He kept his children and son-in-law, Don Jr., Ivanka, Eric and Jared Kushner, closest to him even though they had no political experience. Trump chose Corey Lewandowski, a man who had never worked on a national campaign, as his first campaign manager. Lewandowski was a short-tempered divisive man who fed into Trump's darker side while alienating allies as well as Trump's children, and wrecking havoc with the campaign.

In June 2016, Trump fired Lewandowsky and named Paul Manafort as his new campaign chairman. Paul Manafort, viewed as a veteran Republican strategist, was originally brought into the campaign in March 2016 to assist with delegate count. In Manafort, Trump saw a wealthy man close to his age who had an apartment in Trump Tower. He seemed to look no further. But they had a past.

Roy Cohen, famed McCarthy era lawyer and Trump's mentor, originally introduced Manafort to Trump in the 70's. Trump was doing business with Manafort's old consulting firm, Black, Manafort, Stone & Kelly. In the Political & Otherwise piece written June 30, 2016  "Trump Wears New Clothes", Manafort is described as a man who "has a particular knack for taking autocrats and presenting them as defenders of democracy". Trump knew what he was getting. Until he didn't.

Trump asked for Manafort's resignation in August 2016 after new reports continued to surface about his past work for pro-Russian political elements in Ukraine. Rick Gates had come along for the Trump campaign ride as Manafort's long time business associate. But he continued to work for the campaign after Manafort left and stayed on through Trump's inauguration.

Steve Bannon became Trump's third presidential campaign manager/CEO. He had never worked in a national political campaign. Breitbart News, a far-right publication, was Bannon’s claim to fame along with being a controversial character. None of that seemed to bother Trump.

President Trump has continually lauded himself for running an unconventional campaign, and now an unconventional presidency. He has taken his love affair with choosing inexperienced people for jobs of political importance to the White House with seemingly little regard for the consequences. Trump has never really left campaign mode, and that now takes on an entirely different light.

The old adage that you're only as good as the people you surround yourself with rings loudly for President Trump. When poor judgement, bad decisions and recklessness become known as major hallmarks of a winning presidential campaign, something has gone terribly wrong.       

Special counsel Mueller's investigation has just begun. We have yet to learn all of the facts about Michael Flynn, Roger Stone, Carter Page and the family entanglements of Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump. The closer Mueller gets to the truth about Russian involvement in the 2016 presidential campaign, the louder the calls become for the investigation to end.