Paul Manafort pleaded guilty yesterday to two criminal charges as part of a deal in which he will offer full co-operation with special counsel Robert Mueller. What might President
Donald Trump's former campaign chair have to say?
I spoke to Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, who said we cannot be sure of the outlines of the deal they made.
But Schiff did suggest a few possible ways in which Manafort — who was convicted last month on tax and bank fraud charges and faced more legal jeopardy — could shed light on questions involving possible Trump campaign conspiracy with Russian sabotage of the election or obstruction of justice.
First, Schiff noted, Mueller would likely want to know from Manafort as much as possible about the infamous Trump Tower meeting of June 2016, which Donald Trump jnr, Jared Kushner and Manafort attended in the full expectation of getting dirt on former secretary of state Hillary Clinton supplied by the Russian Government.
Schiff noted that Mueller would want to know what Manafort can tell him about the "background to the Trump Tower meeting, what took place at the Trump Tower meeting, and what took place after the Trump Tower meeting".