Tuesday, November 19

In the last week before the 2024 election, Trump alternates between the legal system and the campaign road

PUBLISHED: January 8, 2024 at 7:46 am

In an attempt to draw attention away from his trailing Republican rivals, Donald Trump is using the last stretch before the Iowa caucuses as a platform for his accusations of political persecution.

This week’s scheduled balancing act between Trump’s court hearings and campaign activities will serve as a metaphor for the whole race being overshadowed by the former president’s legal woes.

He is now the strongest front-runner for a presidential candidature in years because of his tactic of basing his campaign on his fabrication that he won the 2020 election, which is at the centre of two of his four impending criminal prosecutions. He has also made clear calls for “retribution.”

It has further hampered attempts to discredit him as a strong nominee by his main competitors, former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley and Florida governor Ron DeSantis, who debate this week on

Even while many Americans find Trump offensive, a significant portion of his appeal to disgruntled grassroots Republican voters comes from his reluctance to acknowledge the limits of the rule of law and to embrace decorum. The Iowa caucuses on January 15 would symbolise the crucial meeting point between the former president’s legal situation and the 2024 election, as Trump—who is accused of 91 crimes in four different cases—begins his journey towards a third consecutive nomination.

The president’s campaign’s central topic, Joe Biden’s warning last week that Trump may destroy US democracy if he wins in November, seemed to be supported by the president’s growing dictatorial worldview, which permeated his weekend events.

The extent to which Trump’s influence on the future of the country will likely be revealed in the coming weeks, as he has made it apparent that a second term would see him become an even wilder man who would likely work to have any federal proceedings against him dropped.

He is scheduled to appear in Washington, DC, this week alone for a crucial hearing in an appeals court related to his federal election meddling case. He is also scheduled to appear in New York for closing arguments in a civil fraud trial.

During the days preceding the pivotal first nomination race, no other presidential contender has been in courtrooms serving as the defendant in two distinct cases. However, considering that Trump has made it his life’s job to avoid responsibility, no other presidential candidate could have hoped to run a competitive campaign under the same legal shadow.

The former president’s lawyers will hint at his intention to use a new administration as a vehicle for personal retaliation on Tuesday when they argue before a federal appeals court in Washington that the presidential immunity clause in the constitution shields all of his actions following the 2020 election and that he cannot be held accountable for trying to rig the results.

Trump’s federal election interference case represents his vision of the presidency giving nearly monarchial powers, which is a distinctly un-American idea even though the gambit is a long shot legally because it would imply that future presidents could get away with crimes committed to stay in power.

According to various individuals who spoke with them, Trump has scheduled the hearing and planned to appear in court in New York on Thursday for the beginning of the closing arguments in the civil fraud trial that is aimed at him, his adult sons, and the Trump organisation.

After those two events, he is scheduled to travel to Iowa on his plane on Wednesday, followed by a second visit over the weekend. These last hours before the first voting in an election season that is expected to put the US political system to the test historically will take place in 2024.

Trump has dominated coverage of the GOP campaign in what is likely a foreshadowing of how he will manage this week, using his criminal charges and civil fraud trial in New York as a platform for his campaign narrative that he is an innocent victim of banana republic-style justice.

This week’s clash of legal cases and political events will provide DeSantis and Haley with a difficult challenge in trying to stop Trump’s campaign, which is leading polling in Iowa and other states.

In the most important debate of their campaigns to date, the competitors will square off in Iowa on Wednesday night. To stay in the race, they will need to do well in Iowa and the New Hampshire primary the following week. However, the former president has opted to participate in a Fox News town hall event in Iowa, which offers a safer setting, so he won’t be present.

DeSantis and Haley have both said that Trump is being paranoid. On Sunday’s episode of CBS’s “Face the Nation,” the governor of Florida, for example, stated that “the idea he can go and just read off the teleprompter for 45 minutes and then… go back home, that doesn’t cut it in Iowa.” Over the weekend, Haley griped in Iowa that “Trump won’t debate me.” He is acting like Joe Biden and refusing to get on stage for the debate because he is against us asking him questions. However, neither DeSantis nor Haley have publicly criticised Trump for his actions on January 6, 2021, or portrayed him as a danger to democracy.

Haley would rather call him “chaos.” “Imagine a president with grit and grace, a different style, not a name from the past,” the narrator of her new commercial, which made its premiere in Iowa on Sunday, captures the contrast she aims to establish with Trump.

Meanwhile, DeSantis devised yet another subtle dig at Trump by attempting to appease the misconception held by a considerable number of Republican supporters around the alleged tampering of the 2020 election. He said that the GOP couldn’t “just repeat the 2020 election and have kind of the same thing happen again” and that the former president lacked a plan to guarantee electoral integrity.

Haley and DeSantis’ circumspect and euphemistic attacks demonstrate their reluctance to infuriate GOP voters who continue to sympathise with Trump, even if those voters are considering other options. They also demonstrate their lack of political cunning and courage in not using the former president’s biggest potential liability in the general election against him during the primary.

Is Trump giving Biden the upper hand?

Biden’s warnings about democracy in danger, delivered on Friday in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, where General George Washington gathered his army for combat against the armies of an all-powerful British king during the Revolutionary War, gained credibility in light of Trump’s recent wild antics at his campaign events.

As usual, Trump responded by accusing Biden of the same offence that two of his criminal charges accuse him of committing. The reason he poses a threat to democracy is his incompetence. They are meddling in our elections, you know. “They’re doing things with the DOJ and FBI that no one has ever done before in terms of weaponization,” Trump declared on Saturday during a campaign stop in Des Moines.

Donald Trump announces 2024 presidential run: Here's what happens next - Times of India
sorce: timesofindia

The ex-president’s bold propensity to alter history and the truth for his benefit is evident from the context of his statement. In the most egregious attack on American democracy in modern memory, he was giving a speech on the third anniversary of the day his supporters abandoned his Washington demonstration, broke through the US Capitol’s security, and began beating up police officers. Since then, Trump has demanded that the Constitution be repealed, recommended that Gen. Mark Milley, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, be put to death for treason, and promised to use his second term as an opportunity for “retribution” against his adversaries.

Additionally, the former president demonstrated the impolite behaviour that has turned off important swing-state voters in past elections and that the Biden team believes would draw attention away from the incumbent president and maybe offset his unpopularity in a general election.

Trump made fun of Sen. John McCain’s disabilities from the Vietnam War and delivered an odd and nonsensical rant on how diplomacy might have avoided the Civil War over slavery. He bragged nonstop about his numerous indictments and legal battles, referring to special counsel Jack Smith as the “personification of evil” and a “terrible, terrible human”.

Trump also talked endlessly about E. Jean Carroll, who prevailed in a civil lawsuit against him when a jury found him guilty of sexual assault and ordered him to pay her $5 million for abuse and slander. Carroll filed a second case against Trump after a court determined that he was responsible for defamatory remarks, and the trial to decide damages will start the day after the Iowa caucuses next week.

The former president’s ability to persuade a growing number of Americans that the US electoral system is corrupt and that he was not awarded the 2020 election is a reflection of the stark differences in US society and could pose a long-term threat to the credibility of US elections and democracy.

A Washington Post/University of Maryland poll conducted last week revealed the effectiveness of his misinformation campaigns, as 34% of Republicans and 30% of independents wrongly claimed that the FBI planned and promoted the mob attack on the Capitol.

Biden expressed alarm about this erosion of trust and honesty throughout his Valley Forge speech. Biden made a speech that was particularly noteworthy because it was delivered by a US president who felt compelled to do so and because it warned that nearly 250 years of democratic traditions might be about to end. “The defence, protection, and preservation of American democracy will remain, as it has been, the central cause of my presidency,” Biden declared.

When the president visits Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina on Monday, the location of a racially motivated mass massacre in 2015, he will be making a strong statement. His presence is more than simply an apparent attempt to court Black voters, who saved his primary campaign in the state in 2020. There have been indications recently that his alliance is unravelling due to declining support from minorities. Even if the atrocity occurred before the former president’s election, Biden is expected to argue that the political violence and racist language that Trump unleashed may have catastrophic human effects.

The most important political question facing Biden is whether his appeal to Americans to “save the soul of their nation,” as he puts it, will be able to overcome public dissatisfaction with the state of the economy despite recent data showing robust job growth and falling inflation, as well as doubts about his ability to serve a full second term at the age of 81.

It’s already obvious that the election of 2024 will focus as much on the political future of America as it will on more conventional problems, as the political season has intensified ahead of the Iowa caucuses.

“This is the first national election since the American democracy was daggered in the throat by the January 6 insurrection,” Biden declared on Friday. We are all aware of Donald Trump’s identity. We need to respond to the following query: Who are we? That is the matter at hand. Who are we?

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