As Rudy Giulianiâs legal bills have piled up in recent monthsâand as federal investigators intensify their probe into Donald Trumpâs longtime associateâthe former president appears willing to provide just as much help as he usually does when his friends are in need: next to nothing.
For months now, Trump has consistently ignored or rejected Giulianiâs pleas for assistance. And itâs not just that Trump and other prominent Republicans have been unwilling to open up their wallets or war chests to help offset Giulianiâs mounting legal costs; in many cases, Giulianiâs former Trumpworld comrades have declined to even acknowledge the existence of his legal defense fund, which has struggled to raise much of anything from the public.
âThere have been times when Iâve asked people in the [former] presidentâs orbit to see if Trump wanted to draw attention to the fundraising,â said an ally and longtime associate of the former New York City mayor. âThat went nowhere. Many of these people wouldnât even tweet or retweet [links to the legal fund] when I asked them to.â
Trump has made some sympathetic gestures towards his former attorney, as law enforcement officials have closed in on him. When the state of New York yanked Giulianiâs law license, Trump issued a statement calling him the âgreatest Mayor in the history of New York Cityâ and âthe Eliot Ness of his generation.â
Itâs the only formal statement where Trump has mentioned his prior attorney since Twitter suspended the former presidentâs account. Other than that, Trump has only mentioned Rudyâs legal troubles once before, in an aside on Fox News calling the FBI search of Giulianiâs apartment âunfairâ and âa double standard like I donât think anybodyâs ever seen before.â
But while Giulianiâs longtime friend Bernard Kerik, the former New York City police commissioner, has pitched in to create a fundraising site for Rudyâs legal bills, few others have been willing to even throw Trumpâs former consigliere an RT on Twitter. (Trump himself canât retweet anything, as heâs banned from Twitter for instigating political violence, but he could issue a statement of support for Giulianiâs fund and have it spread far and wide through the app.)
Crowdtangle, a search tool for browsing posts to public Facebook groups, pages, and verified accounts, shows that virtually no conservative or MAGA heavyweights have echoed Giulianiâs fundraising links at WinRed and the site set up for him by Kerik. The same is true on Twitter, where verified MAGA mega-follower accounts have largely ignored Giulianiâs attempts to fill his campaign coffers.
The stakes for the former New York mayor couldnât be higher, as he faces a slew of legal troubles. Courts in New York and Washington, D.C., have suspended his law license, depriving Giuliani of an important source of income.
In the meantime, his legal bills continue to grow. Attorneys for Dominion Voting Systems have filed a billion-dollar defamation lawsuit against Giuliani for echoing wild conspiracy theories about the companyâs products. Democratic lawmakers have also accused himâalongside former President Trumpâof helping to incite the Jan. 6 riots at the Capitol. And the most serious legal headache for Giuliani looms over all of his troubles: a Justice Department criminal probe into whether he violated foreign lobbying laws through his work in Ukraine.
Naturally, Trumpâs sporadic public sympathy hasnât extended to amplification of Giulianiâs legal defense fund, much less a check from the former presidentâs well-stocked campaign fund.
According to three sources familiar with the matter, there have been several fruitless attempts this year by Giulianiâs camp to convince Trump to swoop in and provide significant financial support and other forms of assistance to Giuliani. After all, a primary reason Giuliani is even under the investigative gaze of the feds is because of what he didâlargely at the former presidentâs behestâduring the Trump-Ukraine scandal.
To Giuliani and his remaining confidants, Trumpâs glaring (if predictable) refusal to come to his loyalistâs rescue has been a borderline betrayal of a lawyer whoâs landed in legal jeopardy precisely because of how zealously he worked to please Trump.
Still, Giuliani and his advisers are going out of their way to not publicly voice their displeasure with the ex-presidentâs lack of action or financial relief.
According to a person with knowledge of the matter, Giuliani has reminded those close to him to not name Trump when complaining in public or on social media about how top Republicans have abandoned Giuliani in his time of distress.
âWe are allowed to call out the RNC and other Republican leaders,â this source said. âBut not Donald Trump.â
Though the former president has remained stingy toward his former top attorney, that hasnât stopped Trump from throwing Giuliani a bone every once in a while. On Thursday, when the ex-president delivered remarks at a New York GOP fundraiser, he made sure to call Giuliani to the stage, telling attendees, âWe love Rudy.â
But beyond Trumpâs occasional pat on the head, itâs unclear how many powerful friends Giuliani still has in Trumpland.
In late April, Alan Dershowitz, a celebrity lawyer and Democrat who worked on Trumpâs defense team during the first impeachment trial, told The Daily Beast that Giuliani had called him, and that he had agreed to advise Giuliani and his attorneys following the federal raid.
But in the time since, that advisory role appears to be on indefinite hold. âI have not called them, and they havenât called me,â Dershowitz said in a brief interview on Thursday. âSince then, they have not reached out to me for my advice, and I have not gone to them to offer it.â