For the rest of Gary Cohn’s career, whenever his name comes up, people will think of Donald Trump. The relationship worked out much better for Trump than for Cohn.

In The Times, the editorial board comments on Cohn’s departure. Elsewhere: Slate’s Jordan Weissmann notes that Cohn did have one big accomplishment in the job — the corporate tax cut he helped design. “Gary Cohn: The man who swallowed the president’s racism and personal humiliation in order to guide tax cuts for his old employer at Goldman Sachs, and then quit over some steel tariffs,” Weissmann writes.

Generosity. Vox’s German Lopez donated his kidney to a stranger yesterday, having been inspired to do so by his colleague Dylan Matthews, who wrote about the experience last year. This morning, in recovery, Lopez wrote that “it’s immensely gratifying that a 23-year-old woman just got a lifesaving kidney, and a chain of two or more people will too over the next week as a result of all of this.” He added, “I want to communicate that this is something that really is possible to do.”

West Virginia update. After a gutsy strike, the state’s teachers won a raise yesterday. It’s a limited victory, of course. They’re still paid relatively little and face many unnecessary obstacles, like a large number of unfilled jobs. But “there is sense among West Virginians that this strike is about something bigger than teacher pay,” Erin McHenry-Sorber of West Virginia University writes for CNN. “This is a movement for the viability of West Virginia and rural America.” In The Times, Sarah Jaffe writes of labor’s rising ghosts, now visible in the strike.

Texas election. The Democratic turnout in the Texas primaries last night wasn’t what the party had hoped for. David Byler of The Weekly Standard previously explained why demographic change hasn’t brought political change to the state.