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The plot thickens. Campaign finance violations are enough to hold them steady while they decide what they want to do about it. Personally, I wouldn't go to jail for someone who has never demonstrated any loyalty to anyone but himself.
You talking about the ones Mueller outlined, the ones Trump admitted to and duplicated in front of the TV cameras, or did you have a different category in mind.
There will be more than one Article of Impeachment when the House gets through, not just a crime, singular.
Two months would be a short inquiry. Andrew Johnson's took over three months. Bill's was around two.
Nixon doesn't count, because he sniffed the wind and slipped out the back way before he could be brought to trial.
The questions remains as to whether Trump is a Nixon or a Johnson.
Trump's M.O. is to bluff, bluster, and BS right up until he sees the end in near, then work out something.
When he saw he was going to lose the Trump University fraud scheme, he paid up.
When he went belly up some years ago, he convinced the bank to let him have a monthly allowance so he could sell off property at better than fire sale prices.
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When I read that Trey Gowdy was joining his legal team, it was clear that Trump's plan was to work out something with the Republican Senators. Why else hire Gowdy? The man is hardly a brilliant legal mind, and certainly no defense attorney of any sort.
Your points are as valid as your username, as in not.
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