As a matter of American history, Donald Trump’s indictment is extraordinary. But as a matter of the Republican’s personal history, no one should be especially surprised to see this happen to the former president.
A Washington Post report raised a good point overnight about Trump’s record of testing legal limits — and repeatedly finding himself under investigation.
For a half-century, Donald Trump has portrayed himself as the consummate dealmaker — and the ultimate escape artist, a serial entrepreneur turned politician who managed to avoid major consequences despite having been investigated in every decade of his adult life by federal and state agencies, by bankers and casino regulators, by legions of prosecutors and competitors.
Long before he rose to political prominence, Trump first made headlines when he and his father faced a Justice Department investigation for discriminatory housing policies. In the years that followed, the legal scrutiny continued.
More recently, Trump was found to have run a fraudulent charity and a fraudulent “university.” While in the White House, Trump faced a criminal investigation, was impeached twice, and routinely found himself at the center of corruption allegations and scandals.
By some measures, the question isn’t why the former president was indicted yesterday, it’s how he managed to go this long without having been indicted before.
There’s also, of course, the “culture of lawlessness“ that’s surrounded Trump in recent years. The list might be familiar to regular readers:








