What the cases of Robert Menendez and Henry Cuellar have in common
The politics-as-usual defence
A stone’s throw from the Manhattan courthouse where Donald Trump has been in the dock, an equally picaresque political-corruption trial is under way with less publicity. Robert Menendez, New Jersey’s Democratic senior senator, is charged with bribery and extortion, among other crimes. He allegedly used his influence as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to help Egypt and Qatar in exchange for gold bars, a Mercedes and cash. “This was politics for profit,” Lara Pomerantz, a federal prosecutor, declared in her opening statement. Mr Menendez, who asserts his innocence and has declined to resign from office, was a “United States senator on the take”, she added.
Explore more
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “As American as apple pie”
United States May 25th 2024
- Rural white voters in Wisconsin could decide America’s election
- What the cases of Robert Menendez and Henry Cuellar have in common
- How the NFL keeps fans transfixed even when there are no games
- Time is running out to fix America’s student-aid mess
- Fewer migrants are crossing America’s southern border
- Some would-be American immigrants are paying to get robbed
- Politics is the law in Texas
More from United States
The demise of an iconic American highway
California’s Highway 1 is showing the limits of man’s ingenuity
How the election will shape the Supreme Court
A second Trump administration could lock in a conservative supermajority for decades
Could the Kamala Harris boost put Florida in play for Democrats?
Some party enthusiasts think so, but realists see re-energised campaigning there as a savvy Florida feint
America is not ready for a major war, says a bipartisan commission
The country is unaware of the dangers ahead, and of the costs to prepare for them
The southern border is Kamala Harris’s biggest political liability
What does her record reveal about her immigration policy?