Former Donald Trump attorney Michael Cohen potentially made another false statement during his testimony on Wednesday before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform when he claimed during Rep. Jim Jordan’s (R-OH) questioning that he did not want a job in the White House when Trump won the presidency.
Jordan, the ranking member of the committee, closed his opening questions to Cohen by asking about his desire to get a White House job.
“Mr. Cohen, how long did you work in the White House?” Jordan asked.
“I never worked in the White House,” Cohen replied.
“That’s the point, isn’t it, Mr. Cohen?” Jordan followed up.
“No, sir,” Cohen responded.
“Yes, it is,” Jordan said.
“No, it’s not,” Cohen said.
“You wanted to work in the White House,” Jordan said.
“No, sir,” Cohen said.
“You didn’t get brought to the dance,” Jordan said.
“Sir, I was extremely proud to be personal attorney to the President of the United States of America,” Cohen said. “I did not go to the White House. I was offered jobs. I can tell you a story of Mr. Trump reaming out Reince Priebus because I had not taken a job where Mr. Trump wanted me to, which is working with Don McGahn at the White House General Counsel’s office.”
After some crosstalk, Cohen continued.
“What I said at the time, and I brought a lawyer in who produced a memo as to why I should not go in–because there would be no attorney-client privilege,” Cohen said, adding, “and in order to handle some of the matters that I talked about in my opening, that it would be best suited for me not to go in, and that every president had a personal attorney.”
“Here’s what I see: I see a guy that worked for ten years who is here trashing the guy he worked for for ten years who didn’t get a job in the White House, and now you’re behaving just like everyone else who got fired or didn’t get the job they wanted, like Andy McCabe, like James Comey,” Jordan said. “The same kind of selfish motivation after you don’t get the thing you want. That’s what I see here today, and I think that’s what the American people see here, too.”
“All I wanted was what I got,” Cohen said. “To be personal attorney to the president, to enjoy the senior year of my son in high school, and waiting for my daughter, who is graduating from college to come back to New York. I got exactly what I want.”
Cohen is going to prison after pleading guilty to a variety of crimes, including lying to Congress. He claimed in his opening statement that he has lied but is not a “liar,” as President Trump has branded him, framing this hearing as his effort to come clean and tell the truth once and for all. But it appears as though Cohen might be lying again about the White House job potential, as many Trump officials, including Trump’s sons, Donald Trump Jr., and Eric Trump, have said in response to his testimony:
Arthur Schwartz, a GOP consultant who works with Trump Jr., said on Twitter that Cohen specifically complained to him about not getting a White House job:
Sam Nunberg, another former Trump adviser who worked for the president for years and worked with Cohen when he worked for Trump, told Breitbart News, as well, that Cohen personally told him that he was in the running to become the White House chief of staff.
“He told me numerous times he wanted to be chief of staff,” Nunberg said when reached by phone on Wednesday.
Nunberg added that Cohen floated his name as a candidate for chief of staff in the White House to the media.
“Not only that; I was told by numerous people in the transition that Michael was trying to put his name out in the media as a potential candidate for chief for staff,” Nunberg told Breitbart News.
GOP sources familiar with Cohen’s pleading for the White House chief of staff position think there may even be contemporaneous text messages or emails from him to people in the media or in the political world regarding President Trump from the time after Trump won the White House through the early days of the administration during which he was pushing for this. Those messages, if they do exist and emerge, could demonstrate that Cohen lied again on the day he supposedly was–at the urging of congressional Democrats–finally, at long last, going to be telling the truth.
After this moment during the hearing, CNN actually reported that Cohen’s testimony was not accurate.
CNN’s Dana Bash reported that Cohen did seek a White House job:
The Daily Beast, in the summer of 2018, even reported that Cohen “had told friends that he even expected to be named chief of staff” in the White House.
Later in the hearing, under further questioning from Rep. Michael Cloud (R-TX), Cohen further reiterated his claim he was not seeking a job in the White House despite multiple reports to the contrary.
“In today’s testimony, you said you were not looking to work in the White House,” Cloud said to Cohen. “The Southern District of New York, in their statement or sentencing memo, says this: ‘Cohen’s criminal violations in the federal election laws were also stirred like others’ crimes by his own ambition and greed. Cohen privately told friends and colleagues including in seized text messages that he expected to be given a prominent role in the new administration. When that did not materialize, Cohen found a way to monetize his relationship and access with the president.’ So were they lying, or are you lying today?”
“I’m not saying it’s a lie, I’m just saying it’s not accurate,” Cohen replied about the U.S. Attorney’s office statements. “I did not want to go to the White House. I retained–I brought in an attorney and sat with Mr. Trump, with him for well over an hour explaining the importance of having a personal attorney–every president has had one–in order to handle the matters like the matters I was dealing with which included Stormy Daniels.”
Cloud then submitted the sentencing memo from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York into the congressional hearing record.
Also later in the hearing, when Jordan brought it up again, Cohen again dismissed the U.S. Attorney’s office’s sentencing memo of being inaccurate.
After the publication of this story, Trump, Jr., tweeted a link to it along with the statement that he would be willing to testify under oath–as would dozens of others–that what Cohen testified to about not wanting a White House job was “a lie”:
Later on Wednesday, Pastor Darrell Scott–a close informal adviser to Trump–tweeted that Cohen “begged” him to get a job for him in the White House:
Bruce LeVell, the executive director of the National Diversity Coalition for Trump which Cohen was involved with establishing during the campaign, agreed with Pastor Scott–another damaging blow to Cohen’s credibility on this front: