Explanation:Gee, maybe that senior tfg advisor was too hard on Pence. It turns out Pence courageously did his level best to figure out how to throw out the results of a free and fair election: pic.twitter.com/DR7aUHhQWc
— George Conway (@gtconway3d) July 21, 2021
Pence was a toady, through and through. Had there been a scintilla of a chance of a legal ground for what Trump wanted, Pence was his guy."... and now you want him to stand up illegally, unconstitutionally to the United States Senate and the House of Representatives? Are you nuts? Have you looked at Mike Pence?”
— George Conway (@gtconway3d) July 21, 2021
Avenatti has a fool for a client. But he obviously also sincerely believes that he's invisible and bulletproof; because he's a lawyer. Lawyers stand next to the fire all the time. They never get burned; only their clients do. And when that happens, the clients brought it on themselves.Avenatti told the @FoxNews cameraman as he was going in, “I’m pro se because I want the truth to be known.” (No comment from the attorney he knocked aside, Dean Steward.) pic.twitter.com/49S8FUnKGL
— Meghann Cuniff (@meghanncuniff) July 21, 2021
Avenatti was good for amusement while it lasted. When he started talking about running for president it was over. Stormy Daniels at least led to Colbert's Stormy Watch segments which were funny.
ReplyDeleteFrom what little I've read (mostly tweets reporting the opening arguments of this case against him) Avenatti was/is a first class weasel who deserves whatever is coming to him. He cheated clients left, right, and sideways, and I honestly wonder what defense he thinks he's going to raise against this case, except the "I'm a brilliant trial lawyer, watch my dust" defense.
DeleteWhich is where you know absolutely he has a fool for a client.
If he did the crime I hope he does the time. He didn't come across as having a molecule of modesty in him, apparently he didn't have much in the way of judgement, either. I wonder if he'll call himself as a witness, how would that work?
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