Ukrainian President Zelenskyy holds meeting with Trump at Trump Tower.
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By Bob Gaydos
Two reality TV stars met in New York last week to engage in international diplomacy in conjunction with the annual meeting of the United Nations General Assembly. The ironies abounded but were pretty much ignored (or just missed) by much of the so-called mainstream media.
Start with the fact that both men, political novices, were elected president of their homelands by virtue of the popularity of television shows in which they starred.
Donald Trump rode the false image created of him as a shrewd businessman on "The Apprentice" all the way to the White House. The real-life baron of bankruptcy court was going to make America great again.
Volodymyr Zelensky parlayed his TV portrayal of a sincere teacher turned novice president determined to clean up corruption in Ukraine into the real president's job in Kiev.
You really can't make this stuff up.
Zelensky's TV show, "Servant of the People," was not technically a reality show, but its satire was aimed directly at the reality of life in Ukraine at the time. It ran for three years and catapulted the actor to the international stage. Let's see if he can really clear up the corruption.
The plot for both has turned deadly serious the past four years. That's what brought the two men -- one ex-president trying to regain power, one current president trying to preserve his country -- together in New York.
Trump, whose presidency was punctuated by a tax cut for wealthy Americans, a series of unkept promises (the Wall, the infrastructure, health care) and the deaths of more than 400,000 Americans due to his lack of a policy to deal with the Covid virus, is desperately trying to get re-elected president to stay out of prison.
To refresh your memory: After leaving office in 2021, he was indicted on 88 felony charges, ranging from trying to overturn the legitimate results of the 2020 election to unlawful possession of classified government documents and falsifying documents in connection with a hush money scheme to cover up an affair with a porn star that could have derailed his 2016 run for president. He has been convicted of 34 felonies in connection with that case in New York and sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 26.
If he is elected president, he undoubtedly will try to use the recently created presidential immunity ruling by the Supreme Court to get rid of the conviction, even though he wasn't president when he committed the crimes. Hey, what's the point of having power if you can't appoint judges to save your behind.
Zelinsky, of course, has been waging a war, not primarily with corruption, but with Russia, which invaded Ukraine in 2022. That was the point of his New York meeting with Trump.
Much as he undoubtedly doesn't respect Trump, Zelinsky knows that, if by chance, Trump is elected president again, Ukraine's future in the war could change dramatically. Trump has made no secret of his infatuation with Russian Premier Vladimir Putin. Trump has also questioned United States weapons and funding in support of Ukraine and he has also cast doubt on future U.S. support for NATO, which has been a strong supporter of Ukraine in the war.
And let's not forget that one of two impeachments of Trump when he was president involved his effort to get Zelinsky to fabricate corruption evidence against Hunter and Joe Biden in connection with Hunter's business dealings in Ukraine. The aim was to help Trump's presidential run against Joe, who is Hunter's father. Trump threatened to withhold U.S. weapons aid to Ukraine, which was fighting Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine, if Zelinsky did not cooperate. Zelinsky stayed mum. A Republican Senate acquitted Trump.
Despite this sketchy history, Zelinsky, as president of Ukraine, had to make an effort in New York with Trump, just in case.
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