Opinion

When Trump tells us the truth, we should believe him

By Jay Bookman
Sept 6, 2016

Now it gets real.

The frivolities of summer are behind us. Kids are in school, vacations are over and Election Day is less than two months away. The polls are tightening and the presidential campaign has begun in earnest. For a lot of voters, this is when they really start paying attention. And one of the things they ought to be curious about comes to us out of Florida, where the politically bizarre is almost commonplace.

Consider the timeline:

But wait, there’s more.

The campaign donation to Bondi was illegal, because foundations are not allowed to donate to political campaigns. And when the Trump Foundation filed its required 2013 expenditures to the IRS, something odd happened. That report showed no sign of the illegal contribution to Bondi’s campaign. Instead, it reported that the $25,000 contribution had gone to a Kansas charity with a name similar to that of Bondi’s group. (In reality, the Kansas charity received no contribution from Trump or from his charity.)

Trump spokesperson Hope Hicks now attributes both the illegal contribution and the misleading IRS report to “an unfortunate series of coincidences and errors,” and Trump has paid a $2,500 fine as a result.

In assessing that “series of coincidences and errors,” it’s important to remember that Trump has bragged, openly and without apparent shame, about buying politicians with donations, known in shorthand as “pay to play.”

“When I want something, I get it,” he boasted to an Iowa crowd back in the primaries. “When I call, they kiss my ass. It’s true. They kiss my ass.”

“I was a businessman,” he said in a GOP debate in January. “I give to everybody. When they call, I give. You know what? When I need something from them, two years later, three years later, I call them, and they are there for me. It’s true, it’s true.”

I don’t usually give much credence to Trump’s bragging. But in this case, and given all the supporting facts, when The Donald says it’s true, I think we should probably believe him.

About the Author

Jay Bookman

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