By all accounts, CNN was the first to report that lawyers for Trump conducted a review of Boris Epshteyn’s “consulting” for access to Trump. Not long after, John Solomon wrote a more thorough version of the story, including the detail that an announcement for Boris’ appointment as an Assistant to Trump in the White House has been held up as the review concluded.
A week ago, a draft of a press release was handed to transition aides announcing Epshteyn as an assistant to the president, but it was never released, several senior aides confirmed to Just the News. He has told some friends in recent days that he might prefer to stay on the outside rather than go into the administration.
Before I get into what those reports say, consider Hugo Lowell’s take, which focuses not so much on the allegations, but on an assertion that the report itself arises from in-fighting among Trump’s team.
Epshteyn remained part of Trump’s inner circle as of Monday evening, with Trump riding high on the news that special counsel prosecutors had moved to dismiss the two federal criminal cases against him – a victory he credited to Ephsteyn.
The first person that Trump called when prosecutors withdrew the cases against him was Epshteyn, according to two people with Trump at the time, which occurred just as CNN first reported the existence of the review into Epshteyn’s consultancy scheme.
For the remainder of the day, Epshteyn was on the offensive as his allies dismissed the review as an attempt by Warrington to decapitate Epshteyn after he successfully pushed for Bill McGinley to be the White House counsel, rather than Warrington, who had also been in contention for the role.
Epshteyn’s allies later portrayed the review as a political hit job capitalizing on Epshteyn’s role in pushing for the former congressman Matt Gaetz to get the nomination for attorney general before it sank under the weight of sexual misconduct allegations.
It’s unclear the event that predicated the investigation (note that Steven Cheung told multiple outlets that the review focused on others in addition to Boris). But incoming Treasury nominee Scott Bessent’s discomfort with Boris’ entreaties, going back to February and including a pitch for a basketball related business with some ties to Steve Bannon, seem to have played a key role.
Which is one question I have about this process. The various stories quote disgruntled targets, including a defense contractor whose access Boris promised to throttle going forward. CBS includes comment from Don Bolduc, who found the entire process of getting Trump’s neutrality in a New Hampshire Senate primary so distasteful, he left politics thereafter (though a Bolduc staffer was more positive about the experience).
“There’s nothing honorable about politics,” said Bolduc, a retired Army brigadier general. After his failed Senate race, Bolduc enrolled in a police academy and became a rookie small-town cop at age 60.
But it doesn’t say whether Matt Gaetz paid Boris for his support for a reckless bid to be Attorney General just as the ethics report into him was completed.
Boris’ “consulting” has been public for years, in campaign finance disclosures. What seems to have happened here is that someone who, after some brawling, came out of ahead on a contentious cabinet spot, Treasury, complained about the manner in which Boris monetizes his access to Trump.
But the timing of the effort matters: given the dismissal of the federal cases against Trump, he’s unlikely to prioritize the views of those who didn’t help him beat the rap, at least for now. Heck, that may explain the conflicting stories about whether the inquiry is done or not: maybe Trump ended it once the dismissals came out.
And so six people who would like to see him gone have made sure this gets publicized.
It’s sort of cute: People like Solomon claim that Trump’s promise to Drain the Swamp was anything but projection. So whatever else this incident does (Eric Trump has suggested it could lead to Boris’ ouster, but perhaps that’s just from the White House itself), it may disabuse Trumpsters of their fantasy that they’re not part of a very corrupt system.
One more point: I assume there will be a Jack Smith report. And I assume it’ll include Boris’ actions in there, actions that (like this shakedown) seem to tie to Steve Bannon. If people are interested enough in ousting Boris that may provide an interesting dynamic.