I've already educated you why the terms of that treaty were not met, lying ******* moron. It's not my fault you're too big of a lying ******* moron for the education to stick.
As I've explained to you a dozen times already, for the purpose of this impeachment kangaroo court, it doesn't matter if the terms of the treaty were met. The treaty doesn't make it illegal for Trump to submit a request to the president of Ukraine.
LOL
Poor lying ******* moron. I never said it was illegal because of the treaty. I said he was acting under the provisions of the treaty. Therefore, the treaty doesn't buy him any cover for the crime he committed.
Whoever said he was "acting under the provisions of the treaty?" You keep claiming he wasn't. You keep dancing around the issue. You want to imply it wasn't legal for him to make a request of the President of Ukraine, but you know that's a lie.
The treaty makes it apparent that previous claims by numskulls like you that it's illegal for Trump to make a request of the President of Ukraine are not true. It's prefectly legal.
ILLEGAL BRI
Over the course of a single seven-minute media availability on Thursday, President Donald Trump
encouraged two foreign nations — Ukraine and China — to open investigations he hopes will implicate former vice president and current Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden in (unfounded) corruption allegations.
Not only was Trump’s conduct unseemly, but, as the head of America’s elections watchdog explained on national television Friday, it could be illegal.
That’s because federal elections law prohibits any person from soliciting, accepting, or receiving anything of value from a foreign national in connection with a US election. The law doesn’t just apply to money — investigations or political dirt that benefit a particular campaign counts as “things of value” too. And in case Trump is unclear about this, the current chair of the Federal Election Commission (FEC) has gone out of her way to try to explain it to him.
On Friday’s edition of
Morning Joe, FEC chair Ellen Weintraub declined to talk about the specifics of Trump’s case but noted that “the law is pretty clear. ... It is absolutely illegal for anyone to solicit, accept, or receive anything of value from a foreign national in connection with any election in the United States.”