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Trump lashes out at judge and rivals in speech after indictment – live | US news

Key events

This morning Donald Trump issued an all-caps missive, imploring Republicans in Congress to “DEFUND THE DOJ AND FBI UNTIL THEY COME TO THEIR SENSES.”

It’s not the first time Trump and his loyalists have backed such calls, but they make Republican leaders nervous in a year when public safety and crime are front of mind for voters. Republicans worry that these calls will undermine their attempts to cast Democrats who favor policing and criminal justice reform as supportive of the “defund the police” movement, even though most in the party – from Joe Biden on down – do not.

But Trump, facing an array of legal threats, has ramped up his attacks against the FBI after agents recovered classified documents that Trump hoarded at his Mar-a-Lago property. The DOJ is investigating Trump’s handling of classified documents, as well as his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, which culminated in January 6 assault on the US capitol.

Trump’s social media posts are a sign, perhaps, that even as the former president faces prosecutors in New York for his alleged role in a hush-money scheme to cover up damaging claims of extramarital affairs at the height of the 2016 presidential election, he is also worried about his legal exposure on other fronts.

Meanwhile, voters in Chicago elected Brandon Johnson, the progressive Cook county board commissioner, as the city’s next mayor. He beat Paul Vallas, a more conservative Democrat who made crime a central issue of his campaign. Here’s how our reporter, Leigh Giangreco, characterized the race to succeed mayor Lori Lightfoot, after voters denied her a second term in a stunning upset last month.

The election had pit two Democrats from the furthest ends of their party’s spectrum against each other. Public safety has been the number one issue and Democrats across the country were watching to see if Johnson, a progressive who has previously supported the defund the police movement, could defeat Vallas, who nabbed the endorsement of Chicago’s police union and once described himself as a Republican. …

Johnson and Vallas had gone head-to-head after a crowded mayoral primary in February. In that race, incumbent mayor Lori Lightfoot won voters in Chicago’s majority Black wards on the south and west side communities while Congressman Jesús “Chuy” García won Latino voters on the west side. Those votes were up for grabs on Tuesday.

Sam Levine

In an analysis of the Wisconsin senate, Sam Levine likens Protasiewicz’s victory to a “political earthquake” in the state, “one of America’s most volatile political battlegrounds” that has played a central role in recent elections. Though the race was ostensibly nonpartisan, Protasiewicz was forthcoming about her liberal views and especially her support for abortion rights, which proved decisive in the race. Her election will tilt the ideological balance of Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court from conservative to liberal.

Here’s more from Sam:

Her election to the court means that the Wisconsin 1849 abortion ban will be struck down (a case is already coming through the courts). Just as they did across the country in 2022, Democrats made it a central issue in the supreme court campaign and voters turned out.

“Wisconsin voters have made their voices heard. They’ve chosen to reject partisan extremism,” Protasiewicz said during remarks at her election night party in Milwaukee. “It means our democracy will always prevail.”

A challenge is expected shortly thereafter to Wisconsin’s electoral maps, which are so heavily distorted in favor of Republicans that it is virtually impossible for Democrats to ever win a majority. Protasiewicz has said the maps are “rigged” and the court is likely to strike them down, making elections much more competitive in the state.

These two significant consequences show how Democrats may have finally been able to catch up to Republicans when it comes to focusing on so-called down-ballot races – little-known contests for offices like state legislatures and state supreme courts that can have huge policy consequences.

Good morning. I’m Lauren Gambino in Washington, taking over for Martin.

We’re going to break briefly from the fallout surrounding Trump’s historic arraignment on Tuesday to discuss a few other developments that will have significant consequences for American politics.

Wisconsin voters elected liberal judge Janet Protasiewicz to the state’s supreme court in what had been described as the most important election of 2023.

Here’s a dispatch from our reporters on the ground in the Midwestern swing state: Alice Herman in Madison and Sam Levine in Milwaukee

In a historic election, the liberal judge Janet Protasiewicz is projected to win her race for a seat on Wisconsin’s supreme court. Her win will flip the ideological balance of the state’s highest court, which has been controlled by a conservative majority for 15 years.

Elections and democracy observers have called this election the most consequential one of the year, with abortion rights, redistricting and election rules at stake. The race pitted Protasiewicz, a Milwaukee circuit court judge and former prosecutor, against Dan Kelly, a former Wisconsin supreme court justice with ties to election deniers and the far right.

Protasiewicz will replace the conservative justice Patience Roggensack on 1 August; the court will be controlled by a narrow liberal majority.

While some former allies of Trump, like Mike Pence, and some of those in the race for the 2024 Republican nomination against Trump, like Ron DeSantis, have been put in the position of defending the former president in recent days since his indictment, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has kept his counsel. This morning Alexander Bolton writes for The Hill:

McConnell and his top deputies stayed silent Tuesday, signaling how far they have diverged from their former ally.

Many Republican senators blame Trump for the loss of the Senate majority and the disappointing performance of Senate Republican last year. His arraignment Tuesday only adds to the political baggage of the Republican presidential frontrunner.

McConnell, who hasn’t spoken to Trump since December of 2020, didn’t make any statement in response to the former president’s arrest Tuesday. He didn’t say anything when news of Trump’s indictment broke Thursday, either.

Al Cross, a professor of journalism at the University of Kentucky and a longtime commentator on McConnell’s career, said McConnell doesn’t feel the same pressure as other Republicans to rally around Trump.

“Mitch McConnell does not feel pressure in the same way that other human beings do. He has steeled himself to resist the typical politician’s urge to talk and it’s paid off for him, you don’t get in trouble for something you didn’t say.”

Cross speculated that McConnell doesn’t want to put himself out on a limb by defending Trump when the former president is facing additional possible indictments.

“There will be other shoes to drop and I expect Mitch McConnell knows more about Donald Trump’s situation than we do,” he added.

Our video team have summarised yesterday’s historic day of media frenzy as news crews followed Donald Trump’s every step – from Trump Tower back to his Mar-a-Lago residence.

How the day of Trump’s indictment unfolded – video report

By the way, if you’ve got the time and inclination for it, ABC have published a full transcript of what happened in the courthouse Tuesday in the Trump arraignment hearing, which lasted 57 minutes.

Moira Donegan writes for the Guardian today that Trump isn’t the ringmaster he once was, but we’re still watching his show:

Will the criminal charges be good for Trump? Trump seems to think so, or at least that’s what he’s trying to project to the public. He raised a lot of money for his third presidential bid over the five days between his indictment and his arraignment: $7m, according to campaign officials. And as he was inside the courthouse being charged, his campaign sent out a fundraising email, asking supporters to purchase tee shirts featuring a fake mug shot of the former president, along with the words “NOT GUILTY.” They cost $47 a piece.

And the indictment has placed Trump’s would-be rivals for the Republican nomination in an awkward position: they want to distance themselves from Trump, but they can’t afford to alienate his supporters, those die-hards who still make up a ruling majority of the Republican base. If anything, the indictment has made it seem more likely that Trump will secure the Republican nomination, for the same reasons it seemed likely back in 2016: while Republican elites and donors scramble to stop him, and rival candidates define themselves against his example, he’s still the sun around which the Republican party orbits, a force exponentially more powerful than the party itself.

Should we even be paying attention to this? Have we learned nothing? But with Trump, even studied indifference to him still makes him the center of political attention, like when you tell someone not to think of a white elephant.

Read more here: Moira Donegan – Trump isn’t the ringmaster he once was, but we’re still watching his show

It would be fair to say that Donald Trump’s lawyers have got plenty of potential court dates ahead of them in the coming months and years. Here is a list from CNN’s Dan Berman of all the investigations and court activity that the former president is facing:

Mar-a-Lago documents – Special counsel Jack Smith is overseeing the Justice Department’s criminal investigations into the retention of national defence information at Trump’s resort.

2020 election and January 6 – Smith’s purview also includes the period after Trump’s 2020 election loss to Joe Biden and leading up to the insurrection at the US Capitol. Aspects of the Justice Department’s probe include the use of so-called fake electors from states that Trump falsely claimed he had won, such as Georgia and Arizona.

2020 election: Efforts to overturn Georgia results – Fulton County, Georgia, district attorney Fani Willis oversaw a special grand jury investigating what Trump or his allies may have done in their efforts to overturn Biden’s victory in Georgia.

2020 election and January 6: House select committee – before concluding at the end of 2022, the House select committee referred Trump to the Justice Department on at least four criminal charges.

E. Jean Carroll: Defamation suit over Trump’s denial of rape claims – Carroll alleged Trump raped her in a New York department store dressing room in the mid-1990s and defamed her when he denied the rape

January 6: lawsuits by police officers – several members of the US Capitol Police are suing Trump saying his words and actions incited the 2021 riot.

Trump and Bob Woodward – Trump is suing journalist Woodward for alleged copyright violations, claiming Woodward had released audio from interviews without consent.

Trump and the New York Times, Mary Trump and CNN – Trump is suing his niece and The New York Times in New York state court over the disclosure of his tax information.

Trump and CNN – Trump has sued CNN in a southern Florida federal court, accusing the network of a “campaign of dissuasion in the form of libel and slander”. CNN has asked the judge for the case to be “dismissed with prejudice.”

Associated Press is carrying some quotes on the legal basis of the case against Donald Trump that district attorney Alvin Bragg is trying to make, and both of them think Bragg may face an uphill struggle.

The indictment raises many thorny issues about state and federal law that could provide openings for the defense to attack the charges to try to get them tossed before the case even gets to trial.

“The bottom line is that it’s murky,” said Richard Hasen, an expert in election law and professor at the University of California, Los Angeles law school. “And the district attorney did not offer a detailed legal analysis as to how they can do this, how they can get around these potential hurdles. And it could potentially tie up the case for a long time.”

The 34 counts of falsifying business records would normally be misdemeanors, lower-level charges that would not normally result in prison time. But they were bumped up to felonies – which carry up to four years behind bars – because, Bragg says, they were done in an effort to commit or conceal other crimes.

The $130,000 payment to Daniels exceeded the federal cap on campaign contributions, Bragg said. He also cited a New York state election law that makes it a crime to promote a candidate by unlawful means.

Prosecutors filed a “statement of facts” that told their story of a scheme to protect Trump’s presidential prospects by buying and suppressing unflattering information about him.

“There are an awful lot of dots here which it takes a bit of imagination to connect,” said Richard Klein, a Touro Law Center criminal law professor. Bragg said the indictment doesn’t specify the potential underlying crimes because the law doesn’t require it. But given the likelihood of Trump’s lawyers challenging it, “you’d think they’d want to be on much firmer ground than some of this stuff,” said Klein, a former New York City public defender.

Hasen said it’s not clear whether candidates for federal office can be prosecuted in cases involving state election laws. The defense may also argue the case can’t be brought in state court if it involves a federal election law.

Our columnist Osita Nwanevu writes today that Donald Trump’s prosecution is a triumph:

One of the major questions in American political and legal thought has been whether presidents may be allowed to commit crimes. As it stands, the position of the Justice Department is that they may ⁠— for half a century, it has held that a president cannot face criminal prosecution while in office. And while there’s not even a theoretical bar to prosecuting a president once they leave office, no one had ever tried it, leaving the question of whether criminal laws functionally apply to presidents at all, as a practical matter, a matter of speculation.

Here Alvin Bragg has bravely taken a stand: a person may, in fact, be indicted for a crime even if they were once president— just as though they were an ordinary person to whom laws applied. This is tremendous news. No rifts have opened in the time-space continuum. Frogs, locusts, and lice have yet to descend upon Manhattan. For the time being, it appears that a prosecutor really may attempt to hold a president ⁠— or at least a former president ⁠— accountable for a suspected crime without reality collapsing in on itself. What’s more, Bragg’s indictment amounts to an insistence that a former president may be indicted even for a relatively low-level crime like falsifying documents ⁠— just like any other white collar criminal.

Read more here: Osita Nwanevu – Donald Trump’s prosecution is a triumph

The justice system in New York could not be described as the most fast-paced in the world. Lauren del Valle at CNN has set out the timeline of what we can expect:

Prosecutors said they expect to produce the bulk of the discovery in the next 65 days. Trump’s team has until 8 August to file any motions and the prosecution will respond by 19 September. Judge Juan Merchan said he will rule on the motions at the next in-person hearing, scheduled for 4 December.

Karen McDougal: who is second woman in Trump case?

Joan E Greve

Joan E Greve

In advance of Tuesday’s court hearing we knew that payments made to adult actor Stormy Daniels were at the heart of the case. But it emerged that the prosecution is also citing payments made to Karen McDougal. Joan E Greve writes:

According to the Wall Street Journal, the office of the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, has presented the grand jury with evidence involving the former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who claims to have had an extramarital affair with Trump beginning in 2006.

As the Journal first reported in 2016, the parent company of the National Enquirer, which endorsed Trump’s first presidential bid, agreed to pay McDougal $150,000 for her story about the alleged affair. But the tabloid ultimately did not publish McDougal’s account, effectively quashing the story in an industry tactic known as “catch and kill”.

Karen McDougal pictured in 2010.
Karen McDougal pictured in 2010. Photograph: Bennett Raglin/Getty Images for Bacardi

In her first televised appearance in 2018 McDougal detailed her relationship with Trump, saying that he would take her to his Manhattan home in Trump Tower through the back entrance and point out Melania’s room. She also said the affair took place in several locations, including Lake Tahoe, Trump’s private golf club in New Jersey, and the Beverly Hills Hotel.

The incident bears key similarities to the handling of Daniels’ story about her alleged sexual encounters with Trump beginning in 2006. Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer, gave Daniels $130,000 for her story in 2016, and that transaction was not publicly reported until 2018. Cohen has said that Trump reimbursed him for the payment, but the former president denies wrongdoing in the hush money scheme, and he has dismissed the allegations of affairs with Daniels or McDougal.

The grand jury hearing evidence about the McDougal payment raises the possibility of Trump facing additional charges over the incident, or prosecutors may cite the transaction to establish a pattern of hush money schemes on the former president’s part.

There has been a fair amount of commentary that the high profile indictment of former President Donald Trump would boost his campaign for the Republican nomination for the 2024 election, and help Republicans at the polls. That didn’t bear any fruit immediately, most notably in Wisconsin, where liberal judge Janet Protasiewicz is projected to win her race for a seat on Wisconsin’s supreme court.

Her win will flip the ideological balance of the state’s highest court, in an election which democracy observers have called the most consequential one of the year, with abortion rights, redistricting and election rules at stake.

In yesterday’s other vote, progressive candidate and Cook county board commissioner Brandon Johnson won the election for Chicago mayor on Tuesday evening after pulling ahead of his opponent Paul Vallas in the evening.

David Smith

David Smith

Here is how my colleague David Smith in Washington assessed Trump’s speech at Mar-a-Largo last night:

The former president ignored a plea from the judge in the case to refrain from inflammatory rhetoric, even launching a broadside at the judge’s daughter over her political connections.

Supporters wore “Make America Great Again” and “Trump 2024” caps and snapped pictures of the president turned defendant. The audience included Trump’s son Eric and his wife, Lara, Florida congressman Matt Gaetz and pillow maker and conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell.

“I never thought anything like this could happen in America,” Trump said. “I never thought it could happen. The only crime that I have committed is to fearlessly defend our nation from those who seek to destroy it.”

The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, alleges that Trump – the first former president to face criminal charges – falsified business records to conceal a violation of election laws.

He described Bragg, an elected Democrat, as “a local failed district attorney charging a former president of the United States for the first time in history on a basis that every single pundit and legal analyst said there is no case.

“There’s no case. They kept saying there’s no case. Virtually everyone. But it’s far worse than that because he knew there was no case.”

Trump added: “The criminal is the district attorney because he illegally leaked massive amounts of grand jury information for which he should be prosecuted or, at a minimum, he should resign.”

Read more of David Smith’s report here: ‘US going to hell’ – Donald Trump attacks hush money case in grievance-filled Mar-a-Lago speech

On Tuesday Donald Trump gave a 25-minute speech after his New York arrest, where he listed long-held grievances and complaints about the several investigations he is facing before briefly addressing the indictment. As well as the hush money indictment, Trump is being investigated over his handling of classified documents found at Mar-a-Lago, and pressure he put on state officials over the 2020 election result in Georgia. Trump repeated falsehoods about the nature of the accusations he is facing, and personally attacked the prosecutors and investigators leading the cases.

Trump delivers brief, rambling speech after New York arrest – video report

What we know so far …

Welcome to our live US politics coverage the day after former president Donald Trump appeared in a New York courthouse, and then after pleading not guilty to 34 felony counts, returned to his base in Mar-a-Lago to give a speech condemning the prosecution. Here is what we know so far …

  • Donald Trump was charged on Tuesday with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in a historic case over allegations he orchestrated hush-money payments to two women before the 2016 US election to suppress publication of their alleged sexual encounters with him.

  • Trump pleaded not guilty to the charges. The frontrunner in the race for the Republican nomination in 2024, Trump was subdued, responding briefly when the judge asked him if he understood his rights.

  • Trump flew home to Florida where he addressed family, friends and supporters at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, delivering a litany of grievances against investigators, prosecutors and rival politicians. He falsely described the New York prosecution as election interference.

  • The former US president attacked the judge, Justice Juan Merchan, and his family in the speech at the Mar-a-Lago ballroom, in which he also claimed the US was “going to hell”.

  • Merchan, the judge assigned to Trump’s case, did not impose a gag order but warned Trump to avoid making comments that were inflammatory or could cause civil unrest. Prosecutors said Trump made a series of social media posts, including one threatening “death and destruction” if he was charged. If convicted of any one of the 34 felony charges, Trump could face a maximum of four years in prison.

  • The judge set the next hearing for 4 December. Legal experts said a trial may not even get under way for a year. An indictment or conviction will not legally prevent Trump from running for president.

  • Trump’s mugshot was not taken, according to two law enforcement officials, though the Trump camp did create their own one to put on a T-shirt as part of a fundraising effort.

Summarize this content to 100 words Key eventsShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureThis morning Donald Trump issued an all-caps missive, imploring Republicans in Congress to “DEFUND THE DOJ AND FBI UNTIL THEY COME TO THEIR SENSES.”It’s not the first time Trump and his loyalists have backed such calls, but they make Republican leaders nervous in a year when public safety and crime are front of mind for voters. Republicans worry that these calls will undermine their attempts to cast Democrats who favor policing and criminal justice reform as supportive of the “defund the police” movement, even though most in the party – from Joe Biden on down – do not.But Trump, facing an array of legal threats, has ramped up his attacks against the FBI after agents recovered classified documents that Trump hoarded at his Mar-a-Lago property. The DOJ is investigating Trump’s handling of classified documents, as well as his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, which culminated in January 6 assault on the US capitol.Trump’s social media posts are a sign, perhaps, that even as the former president faces prosecutors in New York for his alleged role in a hush-money scheme to cover up damaging claims of extramarital affairs at the height of the 2016 presidential election, he is also worried about his legal exposure on other fronts.Meanwhile, voters in Chicago elected Brandon Johnson, the progressive Cook county board commissioner, as the city’s next mayor. He beat Paul Vallas, a more conservative Democrat who made crime a central issue of his campaign. Here’s how our reporter, Leigh Giangreco, characterized the race to succeed mayor Lori Lightfoot, after voters denied her a second term in a stunning upset last month.The election had pit two Democrats from the furthest ends of their party’s spectrum against each other. Public safety has been the number one issue and Democrats across the country were watching to see if Johnson, a progressive who has previously supported the defund the police movement, could defeat Vallas, who nabbed the endorsement of Chicago’s police union and once described himself as a Republican. … Johnson and Vallas had gone head-to-head after a crowded mayoral primary in February. In that race, incumbent mayor Lori Lightfoot won voters in Chicago’s majority Black wards on the south and west side communities while Congressman Jesús “Chuy” García won Latino voters on the west side. Those votes were up for grabs on Tuesday.Sam LevineIn an analysis of the Wisconsin senate, Sam Levine likens Protasiewicz’s victory to a “political earthquake” in the state, “one of America’s most volatile political battlegrounds” that has played a central role in recent elections. Though the race was ostensibly nonpartisan, Protasiewicz was forthcoming about her liberal views and especially her support for abortion rights, which proved decisive in the race. Her election will tilt the ideological balance of Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court from conservative to liberal.Here’s more from Sam:Her election to the court means that the Wisconsin 1849 abortion ban will be struck down (a case is already coming through the courts). Just as they did across the country in 2022, Democrats made it a central issue in the supreme court campaign and voters turned out.“Wisconsin voters have made their voices heard. They’ve chosen to reject partisan extremism,” Protasiewicz said during remarks at her election night party in Milwaukee. “It means our democracy will always prevail.”… A challenge is expected shortly thereafter to Wisconsin’s electoral maps, which are so heavily distorted in favor of Republicans that it is virtually impossible for Democrats to ever win a majority. Protasiewicz has said the maps are “rigged” and the court is likely to strike them down, making elections much more competitive in the state.These two significant consequences show how Democrats may have finally been able to catch up to Republicans when it comes to focusing on so-called down-ballot races – little-known contests for offices like state legislatures and state supreme courts that can have huge policy consequences.Good morning. I’m Lauren Gambino in Washington, taking over for Martin.We’re going to break briefly from the fallout surrounding Trump’s historic arraignment on Tuesday to discuss a few other developments that will have significant consequences for American politics.Wisconsin voters elected liberal judge Janet Protasiewicz to the state’s supreme court in what had been described as the most important election of 2023.Here’s a dispatch from our reporters on the ground in the Midwestern swing state: Alice Herman in Madison and Sam Levine in Milwaukee In a historic election, the liberal judge Janet Protasiewicz is projected to win her race for a seat on Wisconsin’s supreme court. Her win will flip the ideological balance of the state’s highest court, which has been controlled by a conservative majority for 15 years. Elections and democracy observers have called this election the most consequential one of the year, with abortion rights, redistricting and election rules at stake. The race pitted Protasiewicz, a Milwaukee circuit court judge and former prosecutor, against Dan Kelly, a former Wisconsin supreme court justice with ties to election deniers and the far right. Protasiewicz will replace the conservative justice Patience Roggensack on 1 August; the court will be controlled by a narrow liberal majority.While some former allies of Trump, like Mike Pence, and some of those in the race for the 2024 Republican nomination against Trump, like Ron DeSantis, have been put in the position of defending the former president in recent days since his indictment, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has kept his counsel. This morning Alexander Bolton writes for The Hill:McConnell and his top deputies stayed silent Tuesday, signaling how far they have diverged from their former ally. Many Republican senators blame Trump for the loss of the Senate majority and the disappointing performance of Senate Republican last year. His arraignment Tuesday only adds to the political baggage of the Republican presidential frontrunner. McConnell, who hasn’t spoken to Trump since December of 2020, didn’t make any statement in response to the former president’s arrest Tuesday. He didn’t say anything when news of Trump’s indictment broke Thursday, either. Al Cross, a professor of journalism at the University of Kentucky and a longtime commentator on McConnell’s career, said McConnell doesn’t feel the same pressure as other Republicans to rally around Trump. “Mitch McConnell does not feel pressure in the same way that other human beings do. He has steeled himself to resist the typical politician’s urge to talk and it’s paid off for him, you don’t get in trouble for something you didn’t say.” Cross speculated that McConnell doesn’t want to put himself out on a limb by defending Trump when the former president is facing additional possible indictments. “There will be other shoes to drop and I expect Mitch McConnell knows more about Donald Trump’s situation than we do,” he added.Updated at 08.38 EDTOur video team have summarised yesterday’s historic day of media frenzy as news crews followed Donald Trump’s every step – from Trump Tower back to his Mar-a-Lago residence.How the day of Trump’s indictment unfolded – video reportBy the way, if you’ve got the time and inclination for it, ABC have published a full transcript of what happened in the courthouse Tuesday in the Trump arraignment hearing, which lasted 57 minutes.Moira Donegan writes for the Guardian today that Trump isn’t the ringmaster he once was, but we’re still watching his show:Will the criminal charges be good for Trump? Trump seems to think so, or at least that’s what he’s trying to project to the public. He raised a lot of money for his third presidential bid over the five days between his indictment and his arraignment: $7m, according to campaign officials. And as he was inside the courthouse being charged, his campaign sent out a fundraising email, asking supporters to purchase tee shirts featuring a fake mug shot of the former president, along with the words “NOT GUILTY.” They cost $47 a piece.And the indictment has placed Trump’s would-be rivals for the Republican nomination in an awkward position: they want to distance themselves from Trump, but they can’t afford to alienate his supporters, those die-hards who still make up a ruling majority of the Republican base. If anything, the indictment has made it seem more likely that Trump will secure the Republican nomination, for the same reasons it seemed likely back in 2016: while Republican elites and donors scramble to stop him, and rival candidates define themselves against his example,…
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2023/apr/05/donald-trump-hush-money-court-arrest-indictment-latest-live Trump lashes out at judge and rivals in speech after indictment – live | US news

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