For months, Donald Trump repeated one of his favorite phrases — “No collusion” — as if it were some kind of nervous tic. Last week, however, the president made the phrase quite a bit longer: “Collusion is not a crime, but that doesn’t matter because there was No Collusion.”
The Washington Post reported over the weekend that Trump has taken a liking to this framing, in part thanks to Rudy Giuliani’s influence.
Trump has told some associates that Giuliani has convinced him Mueller has nothing incriminating about him. “Rudy’s told him the other player is bluffing with a pair of 2’s,” said one Trump adviser. And Trump has latched onto Giuliani’s talking point that “collusion is not a crime,” believing it is catchy and brilliantly simplistic, according to people with knowledge of internal talks.
With this in mind, on ABC News’ “This Week” yesterday, Jay Sekulow, a member of Trump’s legal defense team, pushed the line with great vigor. “The question is, what law, statute, rule or regulation’s been violated?” Sekulow asked. “Nobody’s pointed to one.”
It fell to host George Stephanopoulos to respond, “Well, they actually have pointed to several including conspiracy to defraud the United States.”
Right. The trouble with the “collusion is not a crime” talking point is that it’s plainly wrong.
An NBC News’ report recently explained, “There is no statute covering ‘colluding’ with a foreign power, but it is illegal to conspire to violate laws against not only hacking, but foreign participation in elections.”









