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The Trump Verdict makes many views harder to understand

Is Donald Trump Really Just Trying to Win? A New Insight on a Big Bad Thing: Why a Senator isn’t Just Getting Richer?

Biden’s communications director said that Trump is consumed by his own thirst for revenge after the 2020 election loss and his criminal convictions. “He thinks this election is about him. But it isn’t. It’s about the American people: lowering their costs, protecting their freedoms, defending their democracy.”

A small gathering of supporters cheered intermittently during Trump’s speech. A crowd gathered on the street outside of Trump Tower, yelling “New York hates you” after the verdict.

Legal experts believe that Trump is not going to prison because he has no prior criminal record. This crime can result in anywhere from a degree of house arrest to a prison sentence of up to four years.

The Judgment against Donald J. Biden in the November 2016 Insights into his Critique of the 2016 Pew Prosecutor

A gag order was imposed on him because he had repeated false claims about his criminal trial. He said he wanted to testify in his defense, but was advised against it.

That has not stopped Trump and conservative media from repeating exactly that. But now, with this verdict, and with this likely to be the only trial Trump faces before the election — despite three other major, election-related cases against him — expect Biden to lean into this.

The court is in partnership with the White House and the DOJ according to Trump. This is all done by Biden and his people.

There’s no evidence to support the claim. The case against Trump was prosecuted in New York state, meaning it wasn’t related to the White House or DOJ.

“I would have testified. He said he wanted to testify. It’s believed that George Washington would not testify because he would be sued for perjury and they’d get you on something that you said slightly wrong.

Some of the topics covered by the remarks of Donald Trump included the congressional committee investigating the January 26, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, as well as allegations made against him in 2022.

He went into stump-speech mode for a while, repeating his usual anti-immigration rhetoric, and said that American schools are full of people who are not English-speaking.

What Donald Trump has in store: A full stop or a new opportunity to make a change in the course of the 2016 presidential campaign. The case of a presumptive Republican nominee

Dozens of interviews with voters in the swing states of Wisconsin, Arizona, Pennsylvania and North Carolina, as well as Iowa, found not a single supporter of Mr. Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, who had been pulled from his side by his conviction on 34 felony counts of fabricating business records to hide hush-money payments to a porn star on the eve of the 2016 election. The case was framed as election interference in order to keep a sex scandal from coming to light, which may have changed the course of history.

The attempts started quickly and furious. Trump and his surrogates denounced the legitimacy of the verdict immediately afterward, and both campaigns were quickly out with statements and fundraising appeals.

Biden has to make a decision. And right now, he’s slightly behind in the race. So the question isn’t really whether Biden will talk about the conviction, but whether he’s capable of delivering and capitalizing on it.

The latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll suggests most voters will not be swayed either way. It showed that some, including younger voters, might be moved at the margins, but this may be a reset moment in the campaign.

It is a significant moment in American history. Americans will be tuning in now to learn about the conviction. And the bottom line is: The last thing Trump wanted was “Trump” and “convicted felon” in the same headline. And barring an overturn on appeal before the election, that’s what will be attached to him as voters weigh their choices.

The line Biden has to toe is between being president and being a candidate. The White House counsel was silent except for the fact that the New York case shows that no one is above the law.

This is what Trump has in store. A full stop. He’s going to be nominated by the party. It will take place, incredibly, just days after he’s scheduled to be sentenced in this case (July 11).

Trump has full control over the Republican National Committee. Because of this, he is in a stronger position with the GOP than he was in 2016 when he was defeated by Ted Cruz in a convention coup attempt.

But that’s not happening. Republicans are lining up behind Trump, from the speaker of the House to the cadre of Trump allies auditioning to be his vice presidential running mate.

“There is still only one way to keep Donald Trump out of the Oval Office: at the ballot box,” Michael Tyler, a Biden campaign spokesman, said in a statement.

Source: 4 takeaways from the historic felony conviction of Donald Trump

The Election Season: Donald J. Trump’s Corrupt Business Records, the Partisan Divide, and the Kaluza-Klein Scale

This is happening in an election year in which the former president is trying to get his old job back, and it will have political consequences.

A jury of his peers in New York unanimously found Donald Trump guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying business records in order to influence the 2016 presidential election.

The partisan divide that followed the felony convictions of Donald J. Trump was like two different worlds; one where the former president had been hounded and attacked by his corrupt political enemies, and the other where there was no divide at all.

The distance between the two sides was not large, but it was vanishingly small. But a few voices in the Trump universe allowed that Mr. Trump may well have done something wrong, and a few in the anti-Trump sphere said they had finally been convinced to vote for his opponent, President Biden.

“I think that this was all a setup and rigged just like the election,” said Marty Lee, 77, of Scottsdale, Ariz., who was wearing a T-shirt that read “We the People Are Pissed Off.” The trial was “a kangaroo court,” he added. There is no basis for the claim that the Manhattan case or the verdict rendered by a jury of 12 was rigged.

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