‘I wouldn’t give him a nickel’: one-time Giuliani
donors rule out legal aid
Billionaire Leon Cooperman, who backed Giuliani’s 2008
White House bid, says he won’t help with legal fees – and he’s not alone
Martin
Pengelly in Washington
@MartinPengelly
Fri 1 Sep
2023 02.00 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/sep/01/rudy-giuliani-donor-trump-legal-fees
As he
attempts to meet mounting legal fees incurred in large part through his work
for Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani will reportedly not get “a nickel” from one
billionaire who backed his campaign for the 2008 Republican presidential
nomination – or, apparently, much from many others previously big donors.
“I wouldn’t
give him a nickel,” the investor Leon Cooperman told CNBC. “I’m very negative
on Donald Trump. It’s an American tragedy. [Rudy] was ‘America’s mayor’. He did
a great job. And like everybody else who gets involved with Trump, it turns to
shit.”
Brian
France, a former Nascar chief executive, was slightly more conciliatory. But he
told the same outlet his wallet was staying shut: “I was a major supporter of
Rudy in 2008 and at other times. I’m not sure what happen[ed] but I miss the
old Rudy. I’m wishing him well.”
Donald
Trump happened to Rudy.
Giuliani,
now 79, was once a crusading US attorney who became New York mayor in 1993 and
led the city on 9/11 and after. Capitalising on the resultant “America’s mayor”
tag, he ran for the Republican nomination to succeed President George W Bush.
Briefly leading the polls, he raised $60m but flamed out when the race got
serious.
When
Giuliani struggled with drink and depression, his former wife has said, Trump
gave him shelter. When Trump himself entered presidential politics, in 2016,
Giuliani became a vociferous surrogate. When Trump entered the White House,
Giuliani failed to be named secretary of state but did become the president’s
aide and attorney.
In that
capacity he fueled Trump’s first impeachment, over attempts to find dirt on
opponents in Ukraine, and helped drive the hapless attempt to overturn Trump’s
defeat by Joe Biden in 2020, which has spawned numerous criminal charges.
Of 91
criminal counts faced by Trump, 17 are related to election subversion. Four
were brought by the justice department special counsel Jack Smith. Thirteen
were brought by Fani Willis, the district attorney of Fulton county, Georgia.
Giuliani
also faces 13 counts in Georgia, under racketeering and conspiracy statutes.
Like Trump he denies wrongdoing. Also like Trump, he faces other challenges
too.
Smartmatic,
a voting machines company, made Giuliani a target of a $2.7bn defamation suit.
This week, Giuliani was ruled liable for defamation against two Georgia
elections workers. A former personal assistant, Noelle Dunphy, sued for $10m,
alleging sexual assault and harassment. Giuliani has also been investigated by
legal authorities.
A lawyer
for the former mayor has said in court he is struggling to meet his expenses.
On the Upper East Side in New York, his luxury apartment is up for sale.
CNBC found
other former supporters to say they would not help Giuliani now. A personal
assistant to Ken Langone said the co-founder of Home Depot did not plan to
donate to Giuliani’s legal defense fund. A “Wall Street veteran” said he did
not want to be named because “he didn’t want to be bothered by Trump or
Giuliani”.
Ted
Goodman, a Giuliani adviser, told CNBC: “I get that it’s more expedient to say
nasty things about the mayor in order to stay in good graces with New York’s
so-called ‘high society’ social circles and the Washington cocktail circuit,
but I would remind these same people that Rudy Giuliani is the most effective
federal prosecutor in American history, he improved the quality of life for
more people than any mayor in American history, and he comforted the nation
following September 11.
“No one can
take away his great accomplishments and contributions to the country.”
Attempting
to stave off attempts to take away his freedom, Giuliani is due on 7 September
to host a fundraiser at Trump’s Bedminster club in New Jersey. The Republican
frontrunner is due to appear, but he is widely reported to have resisted pleas
for significant monetary assistance.
CNBC also
quoted two anonymous New York Republican operatives. One said: “Rudy should
have a statue built in his honor for saving the city. But instead he is a clown
figure amongst the donor class and needs to run begging for money to pay for a
legal defense in which he tried to overturn an election.”
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