"Honestly, we have all the material," said the president. "They don't have the material." Because the administration refuses to turn over any evidence related to his Perfect Call.
"Honestly, we have all the material," said the President of the United States. "They don't have the material." It was some typical New York real-estate bluster: I've got it, you don't, fuck you. Except Donald Trump isn't in real estate anymore, or even in the branding business he pivoted towards later on. He's been the president for three years, and he's been impeached, and the trial is underway in the Senate, and he just appeared to admit to one of the charges against him. He just bragged about obstructing Congress, the second of two articles along with abuse of power.
The president held a press conference Wednesday at Davos—that haven for populists who represent the forgotten men and women of the American heartland—and predictably, the trial came up. This kicked off a festival of lies: the "transcript" Trump released is not a transcript and it's not exculpatory, it's incriminating. The call in question launched a frenzy of activity from Trump's aides—including stuffing the call record in a filing system meant for top-secret intel—which indicates they maybe thought something Not Good just went down. The whistleblower's account has been corroborated by witnesses under oath and on the record. None of Trump's very brave defenders will speak under penalty of perjury like those witnesses did. They insist on testifying on Fox News.
And then there was this talk of the "material."
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