Rudy Giuliani is ostensibly one of Donald Trump’s most prominent allies, though the former New York City Mayor tends to cause more trouble for the president than he resolves.
Take last night, for example.
Giuliani, one of Trump’s personal lawyers, was interviewed by CNN’s Chris Cuomo, and the host asked Giuliani whether he asked Ukrainian officials to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden. “No,” the Republican replied. “Actually, I didn’t.”
About 30 seconds later, viewers were treated to this exchange:
CUOMO: So, you did ask Ukraine to look into Joe Biden?
GIULIANI: Of course, I did.
CUOMO: You just said you didn’t.
GIULIANI: No. I didn’t ask them to look into Joe Biden.
It actually went downhill from there.
To be sure, watching Giuliani’s apparent meltdown on national television was difficult. If he thought he was representing his client’s interests, the former mayor was mistaken.
But this was about more than just a former prominent politician embarrassing himself on camera. There’s actually a real story here, which may relate to the ongoing scandal about the intelligence community whistleblower.
As regular readers may recall, the New York Times published a curious article in May, raising questions about Biden’s work several years ago on a government-reform effort in Ukraine. There was some suggestion that the Delaware Democrat’s son may have benefited, but the claims of possible wrongdoing quickly unraveled, and the story went largely overlooked.









