Donald Trump’s first criminal trial will be both momentous and tawdry
But will it even matter?
Manhattanites once rolled their eyes at Donald Trump. Then they came to revile him. Soon 12 will decide if he is a felon. Jury selection in his first criminal trial, expected to last up to eight weeks in a shabby courtroom, has sped along; prosecutors will set out their case in a matter of days. One prospective juror confessed that the weight of the task at hand had kept her up at night: “This is, like, a big deal in the grand scheme of things.”
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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Do I look guilty to you?”
United States April 20th 2024
- Donald Trump’s first criminal trial will be both momentous and tawdry
- America’s trust in its institutions has collapsed
- Is ticketing homeless people a cruel and unusual punishment?
- The White House unveils a pair of bad policies to woo voters
- Lots of state legislators believe any contact with fentanyl is fatal
- How two small Texas towns became the patent-law centre of America
- Truth Social is a mind-bending win for Donald Trump
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Yes, but other factors could hold him back
As Jack Smith exits, Donald Trump’s allies hint at retribution
The president-elect hopes to hand the Justice Department to loyalists
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