The Example Was Set with Trump—Now Will U.S. Lawmakers Be Charged for $17M in Hush Money Payments?

Imagine various members of Congress, who paid some $17 million in taxpayer funds to silence people who brought sexual misconduct claims against them, now being investigated, tried, and convicted of felonies, like President Trump.

After all, they did not report those payments as campaign contributions. And the trials will not interfere with elections. But so what if they did?

This from wndnewscenter.org.

Rep. Thomas Massie (video screenshot)

U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY)

That is the suggestion that has been raised in a congressional hearing.

There is strong reason to believe Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s case against President Trump over business reporting issues, described as a “hush money” case because of testimony from ex-porn star Stormy Daniels will be overturned.

U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) charged:

This irony here is that this is going to be vacated and this trial was all about trying to influence an election using the process as the punishment.

Massie’s comments came in a hearing on Bragg’s scheming against Trump held by the House Judiciary Committee.

NOTE: Judge Juan Merchan—whose daughter is a communist/globalist activist and was fundraising off her father’s courtroom decisions during the trial—allowed multiple constitutional errors during the trial.

Bragg charged Trump with 34 felonies based on a handful of alleged business reporting violations which were misdemeanors for which the statute of limitations had expired. Bragg, however, filed them as felonies claiming they were in support of some other, unidentified, crime.

They essentially involved payments to a Trump lawyer who then paid Daniels to keep quiet about an alleged affair, which both individuals have denied happened.

Witnesses including Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey and FEC Commissioner Trey Trainor both told Congress the conviction almost certainly will be overturned because of Merchan’s apparently willful failures to follow the Constitution.

Massie took the entire case apart in a few minutes of comments during the hearing;

A report at Twitchy cited Massie’s Comments:

Congress has paid over $17 million in hush money for sexual misconduct inside of the offices in these buildings. And what’s more, is that it was taxpayer money. The allegation is that President Trump paid $130,000 of his own money.

But here in Congress, there might be some here on this dais—I mean, I’m for turning loose ALL of these records—who had the taxpayer pay for their sexual misconduct charges, the hush money. I bet there’s some over there, there may be some over here. I don’t know, but I do know it’s taxpayer money. And I do know that not a single penny of it has been turned in as a campaign finance expense. Is the FEC going to investigate the $17 million dollars that Congress has paid behind closed doors for these sexual misconduct allegations?

The report explained:

We imagine many representatives suddenly got obsessed with staring at their shoes at that moment. And then Massie said he might file a complaint so the FEC WOULD investigate Congressional hush money.

 

We [the People] wouldn’t bet against him doing that. 

Massie noted that those hush money payments by members of Congress, to suppress various sexual misconduct claims inside their congressional offices, would be considered campaign finance violations under Bragg’s theory.

The committee hearing specifically was held to examine Bragg’s office actions, as multiple prosecutors earlier had rejected the idea that there was any evidence to pursue a case against Trump.

God speed to Congressman Massie.