May 5, 2024

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Donald Trump: I will appoint a special prosecutor to persecute Biden if elected |  international

Donald Trump: I will appoint a special prosecutor to persecute Biden if elected | international

Donald Trump greets his guests at a fundraiser this Tuesday in Bedminster, New Jersey.Ed Jones (AFP)

The first former US president to be charged with a federal criminal offense shows no sign of discouragement after dropping his second indictment in just over a month. After one in ny for Stormy Daniels Affair -Paying black money to silence an extramarital affair- The Republican was charged Tuesday morning in Miami with revealing secrets and obstructing the course of justice, among the 37 crimes attributed to him, which are more serious legally than the previous case, but politically indistinguishable, given that every setback Legalities seem to be pushing his candidacy for re-election in 2024.

Hours after pleading not guilty, the businessman seized a fundraising event to denounce the accusation, calling it an “outrageous abuse of power” and “election interference”; To attack the Democrats, in his opinion, for doing the same or even worse things – he invoked Hillary Clinton, but also called Joe Biden corrupt – and reaffirmed his right to keep classified material that led to the impeachment: “Every right to have those documents.” He also affirmed his intention to reach the White House next year, although he faces charges that may send him to life in prison, and to take revenge on the Democrats if he succeeds: “I will appoint a special prosecutor to pursue Biden if I am elected,” he threatened. It was an unusually short speech, rather muted in comparison with other, more energetic occasions.

The scene of relief was his golf club in Bedminster (NJ), a prominent place in the federal indictment—featured in two key incidents cited in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s summary, at which Trump also directed his arrows—and where this afternoon’s event for major donors was held. personalities, including businessman and conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell, plumber and luxury fashion agent Kash Patel and Andrew Giuliani, son of his ex-lawyer Rudy Giuliani. While his wife Melania spent the day in New York away from the media and judicial hype, Trump arrived in Bedminster around 8:30 p.m.: the convoy of cars entered the building as loudspeakers blared Skeptical mindby Elvis Presley. Como in April, the magnate hizo of the contrariedad virtud, intentando rentabilizar en adhesiones y donativos la nueva acusación al igual que había hecho a lo large día, con correos electronicos a sus partidarios para pedirles dinero y post grandilocuentes en Social Truth, su propia social network.

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The courtyard of the Bedminster Club received dozens of folding chairs arranged for select guests, many of them with long shoulders, in the air of enthusiasm typical of great occasions. Judging by the polls, the victim flag is working in his favor: Republican voters remain overwhelmingly loyal to Trump despite the charges against him and the other legal actions he faces, according to recent polls. In a CBS poll released Sunday, 61% of respondents said impeachment would not change their opinion of the preferred 2024 GOP primary candidate, while 80% would consider political office. Less partisan polls, such as those by journalists and columnists the The New York TimesTrump also appears ahead of his rivals in the primaries, with 8.2 points, two points ahead of his direct competitor, Ron DeSantis.

However, as Attorney General Bill Barr said this weekend, even if half of the charges against him today in Miami were true, the Republican would already be “fried.” But if the 34 counts of falsifying business records that the Manhattan attorney general brought against him in April succeeded in uniting many Republicans around Trump, the 37 counts filed Tuesday in Miami could have the same effect among his followers, and especially among those who have gathered tonight in Bedminster. Federal impeachment measures, which at least 60% of Republican voters consider political in nature, could further spur the forces.

Although Trump has been criminally charged, he is not barred from running or holding office, even if convicted. As Trumpy as he is, his former press secretary, Stephanie Grisham, warned Tuesday that he would “triple his bet. He’s going to collect the money. He’s going to play the victim.” As he explained, by the smell of crowds, in Bedminster. The politics of denying reality reached its climax when the former president recounted: “A lot of people asked me why I had these boxes. [de documentos]What do you want from them? He explained that the boxes “contain all kinds of personal belongings, shirts and shoes.”

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