This is an interesting development in all events, but particularly if it presages a flip on the part of Trump’s CFO Allen Weisselberg, who just fired the lawyers he had that were provided and paid for by Donald Trump. What is intriguing about that, is Michael Cohen fired his Trump lawyers before he flipped and so did Cassidy Hutchinson.
Couple this fact with the fact that the Manhattan District Attorney’s office has put the grand jury on hiatus for a month. Are these two facts related, or is this merely coincidence, timewise?
And all this is happening along with rumors (mainly from Trump) that the Manhattan D.A.’s case has gone cold.
The grand jury may vote in the next couple of days. And Alvin Bragg does not have to immediately reveal what they vote to do.
As far as Weisselberg is concerned, as the commentator said, Weisselberg may have testified and nobody would have known it, because he’s been doing time at Rikers. So, he may be cooperating with the investigation, or maybe the two Trump lawyers aren’t representing him anymore, and the case is over. It could be that simple.
As always, we only see the tip of the iceberg. There is so much more to be learned. Trump always likes stall tactics. They’ve worked so well for him in the past. They may not work so well right now. As the year progresses, Ron DeSantis and others will officially be declaring their candidacy for the GOP nomination. Bad publicity hitting Trump a month or two from now could possibly be that much more damaging.
We’ll see. As you will hear ad nauseum from here on out, we are on political terra incognita.






















My guess: he’s been cooperating a while now and things have hit a stage where they’re about to make it official. I keep telling the impatient that expecting loud, obvious moves is anything but how this game works. If this proves true, I’m going to be a little insufferable over the doomers for more than a bit.