Trumpistas have fought a constant retreat action on everything Donald ever since his nomination. Long gone are the times when anyone thought that he "hires only the best people" or could actually "lock her up" or even really "build the wall".
This, too, will past into history as a case where pro-Trump people considered this not a crime, but which will turn out as only the tip of the systematic criminality that is the Trump Organization.
Anecdotal refutation - My father (and some other Republican friends of mine) thinks Trump can get that wall built... and that it would be a seriously effective way to curb illegal immigration. Of course, on the same general topic my father also tried to seriously claim that 90% of (Obama-era) asylum seekers don't show up to their court date. Incidentally, it looks like that claim is based on
this article. It's actually a little amazing, given that the source of that number, linked to in the article itself, says that
nearly 90% of the unaccompanied minors who are facing deportation nevertheless qualify for immigration relief, allowing them to remain in the United States legally, which is notably different in nature and implications.
Anyways... that's a tangent.
Zig's argument is that protecting Trump's candidacy wasn't the sole benefit of the payment, so a narrow reading of the FEC guidelines (rather than the law itself) would mean it wasn't a campaign contribution. That interpretation would seem to make the law too dependent on unprovable intent and too easy to circumvent, so I'm not convinced a jury would agree. The Edwards case is simply not similar enough to take as a precedent, but at the very least Zig needs to establish that Trump would probably have paid the hush money even if he wasn't running for office. Despite TBD's fraudulent claim to have some, I haven't seen any evidence of that. Maybe it's in Pecker's safe.
Highlight mine. Also, (combining TBD's advocacy) that Trump would have made or ordered the payment regardless of the election, like he then presumably did plenty of other times when he wasn't a candidate. I'd count these as fair points, but that they're unconvincing when it comes to fully addressing whether it was done as a campaign contribution. The relative size, method, and specific intent of the payment are all also important considerations as well, after all, to begin with. If, say, a $15K payoff suddenly became a $150K payoff when the person was a candidate, that would pretty clearly indicate that it's not a "normal" payoff.
To separately address a couple other issues... yes, this is dramatically worse than the Obama campaign's reporting mistakes in its nature, and quite blatantly so. No, this is not what
I would consider impeachment worthy, itself, even if I also think that everyone who thought that Bill Clinton should have been impeached over the Monica Lewinsky scandal should be clamoring for Trump's impeachment by now (and that it's quite telling that they're mostly doing much the opposite).
What makes you think they think it doesn't apply? What makes you think they care if it applies?
The prosecution wants to nail Cohen for this because it hurts Trump politically and is a feather in the prosecutor's hat. The defense counsel is fine with pleading guilty to it because he's a Hillary toady who probably also wants to nail Trump. Cohen is probably mad at Trump for hanging him out to dry and so probably doesn't care if it hurts Trump, but why wouldn't he plead guilty to this if it gets him a better sentencing deal? Of course he would. And the prosecution probably offered him a better deal by pleading guilty to this because that gets the prosecutor what he wants. And why would the judge care? No injustice is being done to Cohen here, nobody is going to appeal, and the political implications are not the judge's problem.
*sigh* Assume significant and nasty bias. Conclude there's significant and nasty bias. Focus solely on that to the exclusion of anything else. Man, the logic there is totally irrefutable if you assume your conclusion and then work backwards to set up the case for it, right?