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    Friday briefing: Could Trump go to prison – and what does his conviction mean for the US election?

    Good morning. Donald Trump is a convicted criminal. A jury in New York unanimously found him guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying business records in an attempt to cover up the alleged sexual encounter with Stormy Daniels that threatened his bid for the presidency in 2016. Trump is the first former president to be convicted of a crime, and he could yet be the first convicted felon to be elected president. This is a historic moment, and its reverberations have barely begun to be felt.Today’s newsletter explains what it all means: the verdicts, the instant fundraising emails, and the consequences still to come. Here are the headlines.Five big stories
    Cancer research | Thousands of patients in England are to be fast-tracked into groundbreaking trials of personalised cancer vaccines in a world-first NHS “matchmaking” scheme to save lives. The jabs, which aim to provide a permanent cure, are custom-built for each patient in just a few weeks.
    General election 2024 | Diane Abbott has not been treated “fairly or appropriately” by some Labour colleagues and should be allowed to stand again for the party at the election if she wishes to do so, Angela Rayner has said. Party apparatchiks will meet next week to agree on Labour’s full list of parliamentary candidates.
    Israel | An investigative reporter with Israel’s leading leftwing newspaper, Haaretz, has said unnamed senior security officials threatened actions against him if he reported on attempts by the former head of the Mossad to intimidate the ex-prosecutor of the international criminal court.
    London | A nine-year-old girl is in critical condition after she was shot by a hitman on a motorbike while eating with her family at a Turkish restaurant. Three men were also hit and wounded in the incident in Dalston, north-east London on Wednesday evening.
    Ukraine | Joe Biden has allowed Ukraine to use some US-made weapons over one part of the Russian border, relaxing an important constraint on Ukraine’s ability to defend itself. The change is designed to allow Kyiv’s forces to defend against an offensive aimed at the city of Kharkiv.
    In depth: Trump humbled – but seeking to take advantageView image in fullscreenDonald Trump’s convictions all relate to a $130,000 hush-money payment made to Stormy Daniels at the end of the 2016 campaign so that she would not go public with her claim of a sexual encounter. The payment was made by Trump’s fixer, Michael Cohen, but Trump later reimbursed him.Prosecutors alleged that Trump committed a crime by falsifying records to classify illegal payments as legitimate business expenses, and that he did so to improperly influence the outcome of the election. Yesterday, after deliberating for less than ten hours, the jury unanimously agreed.Lauren Aratani’s guide from last month is a useful primer on the case. Here’s what you need to know about what just happened.The verdictsThe jurors had to reach a unanimous decision, and although the judge explained that they did not need to agree about which laws Trump broke to find him guilty, he said they had to agree on the fundamental charge: that Trump falsified records to conceal a crime. That meant three possibilities: a unanimous conviction, a unanimous acquittal, and if even one juror disagreed, a mistrial.The jury has been subject to unending scrutiny over the last six weeks, including claims that one member “made friendly eye contact with Trump” – and there has been a great deal of speculation that a single politically motivated juror could deny the necessary unanimity.But in the end, they agreed, and pretty quickly, on all 34 charges – separate batches relating to checks Trump signed, invoices from Cohen, and accounting records. Although nothing will stop Trump’s claims that the process was a witch-hunt based on a false premise, that rapid and absolute consensus makes those arguments harder to reasonably sustain.The aftermathView image in fullscreenAbout those witch-hunt claims: immediately after the verdicts were delivered, Trump – said by reporters to have looked downcast in the courtroom – appeared outside and gave a preview of the story he will tell again and again in the months ahead.“This was a disgrace,” he said. “This was a rigged trial by a conflicted judge who was corrupt.” He misleadingly called the district attorney “A Soros-backed D.A.”, and claimed the trial was a politically motivated attack by the Biden administration. He claimed he had no hope of a fair trial in New York. “We didn’t do a thing wrong,” he added. “I’m a very innocent man.”Other Republicans quickly echoed those claims. Meanwhile, the Trump campaign sent out an email asking his supporters for money because he was a “political prisoner”; his fundraising site briefly crashed under the weight of visits.For its part, the Biden campaign put out a statement saying that the verdict showed that “no one is above the law”, but again redirecting supporters to the election ahead. It also sought to fundraise on the back of the verdict.Outside the court, Maya Yang and Victoria Bekiempis reported on a “heavy sense of shock and relief” among the protesters and counter-protesters gathered there. The mood on Fox News, unsurprisingly, was febrile; the forthcoming trial of Hunter Biden came up almost immediately. Pundit Jeanine Pirro appeared to raise the spectre of violence: “We are a country that was born of revolution … We are fighters, and I hope it is only at the ballot box. My insides are so angry.”The other casesThere are three remaining criminal cases against Trump, all arguably more serious than the hush-money trial: two relate to attempts to overturn the 2020 election result, and a third is about the secret documents found at Mar-a-Lago.But all three appear unlikely to reach trial before the election. Most observers say that Trump’s lawyers have deliberately thrown up procedural questions in order to delay the cases as long as possible. They could also be affected by a pending supreme court case over Trump’s claims of presidential immunity.If Trump wins, he could shut down the two cases which are being prosecuted on the federal level, and potentially seek to have state prosecutions put on hold.What happens nextTrump drove to Trump Tower immediately after leaving court. Sentencing has been scheduled for 11 July – four days before the Republican national convention – although it is possible that it will be delayed further.In this piece, Sam Levine sets out the possible punishments, ranging from up to four years’ imprisonment to fines or community service. He cites experts who consider a prison sentence unlikely, because he is a first-time offender convicted of a non-violent offence. But there has also been some speculation that the judge in the case, Juan Merchan, could put Trump behind bars because of his reputation for taking white-collar crime seriously.Even if Trump is jailed, his sentence will probably be delayed while he appeals against the verdict. That could take months or even years to play out. He has no option of pardoning himself if he returns to office, because the prosecution was brought on a state level.There is no legal impediment to Trump running for the presidency as a felon, or even if he is jailed. (That’s happened once before, a century ago.) He could even be president from his cell.Again: a prison sentence is unlikely. But even the prospect of a president doing community service is an astonishing departure from the norm.The political falloutYou will have heard the question countless times: could even being convicted of a crime put Donald Trump’s supporters off voting for him? Now that theoretical matter has become a reality. In this piece, David Smith looks at the recent polling, which finds that two-thirds of respondents say that a conviction would make no difference to their vote.That is unsurprising, given the state of political polarisation in the US – and the most likely consequence for the campaign is renewed energy among committed supporters on both sides. But while that majority who are unmoved by the guilty verdicts is sizeable, it only takes a small percentage shifting to change the outcome of what remains a very close election.Key to what the impact of the verdicts will be, David writes, is how Joe Biden will handle it. So far, he has avoided commenting on the trial, lest he be accused of political interference. But Biden, who has found success in the past by running as a defender of democracy, has little choice but to talk about Trump’s conviction on the campaign trail. The danger is that his opponent will then cast him as forgetting the pocketbook issues which matter to ordinary Americans.“The president’s opponent has just handed him the kind of campaign weapon that any candidate would dream of,” David writes. “Biden would be wise to use it with precision.”skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionWhat else we’ve been readingView image in fullscreen
    Janelle Monáe is at turns satisfyingly kooky, inspiring and sentimental answering readers’ questions, including the revelation that she picks film parts based on whether her pubic hairs tingle. Toby Moses, head of newsletters
    Neanderthals may have been wiped out by deadly infectious diseases spread by Homo sapiens – and the DNA extraction technique that has revealed this possibility is a more powerful tool for understanding the ancient world than anything we can imagine except time travel. That’s Jonathan Kennedy’s premise in this remarkable piece. Archie
    The ongoing purge of left-wing voices from the Labour party is skewered by former MP Chris Mullin: “It is becoming clear that the endorsement of candidates has been cynically delayed until the last moment precisely to ensure that there is no time for any argument or appeal before close of nominations.” Toby
    Will Smith’s rehabilitation is meant to begin with the release of the latest Bad Boys movie next week. Tom Shone’s piece about the way back is a reminder that Hollywood is mad, and “will forgive just about anything but bad box office”. Archie
    An AI generated image saying “All eyes on Rafah” has sprung up on millions of social media feeds across the world. This explainer looks at where it came from and how it’s being used to draw attention to the plight of Palestinians in Gaza. Toby
    SportView image in fullscreenCricket | England will head to Barbados on Friday morning to start the defence of their T20 World Cup title buoyed by a comprehensive seven-wicket victory over Pakistan, achieved with 27 balls remaining. Adil Rashid (above) was named man of the match after taking two wickets and conceding just 27 in his four overs.Football | The Ipswich Town manager, Kieran McKenna, has signed a new contract, meaning he will lead the Premier League newcomers into next season despite interest from Brighton, Chelsea and Manchester United.Athletics | Matthew Hudson-Smith set a new European 400 metres record with a storming season-opening run at the Diamond League meeting in Oslo. Hudson-Smith, who won in 44.07 seconds, said the result would help him prepare for “the big one, which is the Olympics”.The front pagesView image in fullscreenAlmost all today’s front pages were all subject to a late change last night – and you can see a wrap of global media reaction to the verdict here.On the front page of the Guardian, the headline “Guilty on all counts” with a picture of Trump, eyes downcast. The Telegraph has two words: “Trump guilty”, while the Daily Mail has the same thing with an exclamation mark attacked. In the Times, it’s “Trump found guilty in hush money trial”. The Mirror headline also has “Trump guilty” under the line of “Historic trial verdict” and a big picture of Trump looking down – alongside an old image of the former president with Stormy Daniels. The Sun has a very similar front page with “Guilty” under the words “Historic U.S verdict”. The i wins the prize for brevity, with “Guilty”. And in the Star it’s “You’ve been Tango’d”, with a very orange-looking felon.The verdict came too late for the Financial Times and the Daily Express. In the FT, it’s “Voters brace for tax increases despite assurances from Labour and Tories”. The Express has “Exposed! Splits in Labour ranks,” reporting on the Diane Abbott row.Something for the weekendOur critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read and listen to right nowView image in fullscreenTVEricNetflixThe six-part drama written by Abi Morgan (The Iron Lady) stars Benedict Cumberbatch as genius puppeteer Vincent, the creative force behind a Sesame Street-esque show. When his nine-year-old son goes missing, he conjures a 7ft-tall Muppets-meets-Monsters, Inc. creation called Eric, who follows him round as a manifestation of his hopes, fears and guilt. Awards will doubtless be given to Cumberbatch for his portrait of Vincent’s descent into hellish despair. Lucy ManganBookThis Strange Eventful History – Claire MessudShakespeare’s Jaques, from As You Like It, declared that the “strange eventful history” of human life has seven “acts” or “ages”. Messud has taken her structure as well as her title from his famous speech, for this ambitious and compelling novel about a Franco-Algerian family. This is a big novel spanning continents and generations, but it also has the essential small virtues of precision and imaginative sympathy. Lucy Hughes-HallettFilmThe BeastCinemas nationwide from FridayBertrand Bonello’s new film is a vast unsettling dream of the future and the past starring Léa Seydoux – and it may be his best yet. It is a film about the shock of the new, the realisation that technology is on the point of modifying and even abolishing humanity without our consent; it invites us to test our thumb on the cutting edge of modernity and draw blood. Peter BradshawPodcastGangsterBBC Sounds, episodes weeklyInvestigative journalist Livvy Haydock goes beyond the gangster cliches with her thoughtful interviews in this new series focusing on Viv Graham. With his imposing demeanour and full control of Newcastle’s bouncers, there’s no doubt Graham was feared, but Haydock shows the heartbreak his family felt after his 1993 murder, which remains unsolved. Hannah VerdierToday in FocusView image in fullscreenExposing Israel’s secret ‘war’ on the ICCMichael Safi speaks to Harry Davies and Yuval Abraham on how Israeli intelligence agencies tried to derail an ICC war crimes investigationCartoon of the day | Ben JenningsView image in fullscreenThe UpsideA bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all badView image in fullscreenDiversifying and electrifying TV schedules in equal measure, Nida Manzoor’s comedy We Are Lady Parts has been a runaway success. The second run of the Bafta-nominated series about an all-female Muslim punk band began airing in the UK on Channel 4 this week, and Manzoor has seriously raised the stakes.Speaking to the Guardian’s Chitra Ramaswamy, she explained how she invited none other than Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai to appear on the show – and she said yes. Writes Ramaswamy, Manzoor’s “confidence and clarity of vision” are clear to see in this new series, which “pulls off that rare feat of being even better than the first one … It’s her best work yet; not so much breaking the mould as making it from scratch in the shape of a Muslim punk in a niqab, surrounded by a halo of vape smoke.”Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every SundayBored at work?And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until Monday.
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    Trump guilty on all counts – so what happens next? – podcast

    Donald Trump has made history again, becoming the first US president, sitting or former, to be a convicted criminal. Late on Thursday a New York jury found him guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying records to cover up a sex scandal. Within minutes of leaving the courtroom, Trump said he would appeal.
    On an historic night for US politics, Politics Weekly America host Jonathan Freedland speaks to Guardian US reporter Sam Levine about what the hush-money trial verdict will mean – both for Trump and for the election in November

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    I had convinced myself Trump would never be convicted. I’m happy I was wrong | Moira Donegan

    The former president of the United States, and the presumptive Republican nominee in the 2024 presidential election, is now a convicted felon 34 times over. In New York on Thursday, 12 jurors found Donald Trump guilty of falsifying business records in order to influence the 2016 election. It is the first criminal conviction for Trump, who has also been charged with felonies in three other criminal cases currently under way in Florida, Georgia and Washington DC. He is the first former president to ever stand trial on criminal charges.The jury found that Trump, who denies the charges, falsified business records in 2016 and 2017, when he made a series of payments to his lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, to reimburse Cohen for a payment of $130,000 that he had made to Stormy Daniels, a pornographic film actor, in exchange for Daniels’ silence about a sexual encounter with Trump in 2006. Paying Daniels to shut up, the prosecution had argued, amounted to a conspiracy to influence the election. Labeling the payments to Cohen, as Trump and his flacks did, as payments of Cohen’s “legal retainer” was a fraud committed in furtherance of that conspiracy.The trial, which lasted more than six weeks, has largely taken Trump off the campaign trail, and drained funds from both his re-election bid and the Republican National Committee, which have had to pay for his lawyers. Unable to travel to swing states due to his need to be present at the courthouse in Manhattan, Trump has undertaken a series of bizarre endeavors in the heavily Democratic state, seeking to rally support and draw further attention to himself. He held a rally in the Bronx. He even paid a weird visit to a bodega.Meanwhile, Trump’s antics in and outside of the courtroom frequently threatened to derail the proceedings. He repeatedly violated a gag order by publicly disparaging the judge and his daughter, racking up thousands of dollars in fines. He summoned other Republican politicians to court – all dressed like him, in a kind of creepy homage – to spew invective on his behalf.Even aside from these theatrics, Trump seems to have ushered in his conviction by meddling in the work of his lawyers: throughout the trial, the defense team worked hard to make unlikely, irrelevant claims – like that Trump never actually had sex with Daniels – that fell flat, wasting time and confusing what little argument they had. This, they seem to have done at Trump’s own direction.In terms of a contest of courtroom performance, it wasn’t even close. The only way Trump would have been acquitted would have been if the jury had been too afraid to convict a former president: based on what they saw in court, there was no way to acquit him as a matter of law. They returned their guilty verdict after just 10 hours of deliberation, evidently unfazed.Though now a felon, Trump remains free, and odds are good that he will not face prison time, which is not required for these convictions. His sentencing will take place on 11 July, just days before the beginning of the Republican national convention.The verdict adds a new variable to the ongoing presidential contest: incensed rightwingers, whose media has already spent months working to delegitimize the New York trial as a political witch-hunt, will scream invective – and try to fundraise. Some liberals, anticipating defeat the way an abused dog anticipates being hit by the arm that reaches out to hit him, will also wring their hands, worrying that the verdict will somehow ricochet and wind up working in Trump’s favor.Don’t buy it. The criminal conviction of a very powerful and flagrantly lawless former president is an unalloyed good. It is good for the Biden campaign, which has needed a boost as a sore economy and the president’s ongoing support for Israel’s genocide in Gaza have enraged voters. But it is also good for the democratic process, which will now be able to proceed in November in full possession of exactly the sort of information that Trump’s hush-money scheme was intended to keep from it in 2016: evidence of the truth of his character.And it is extremely good news for America’s state institutions, which have long been unwilling to hold Trump to account for many of his crimes. Partly because of the Republican capture of the courts and partly because of a contemptible institutional cowardice, it has long seemed that no one would be willing to make the law apply to Trump – that his money, his shamelessness and his cult of influence had effectively placed him above the law. It took a jury of New Yorkers to say that this was not so.There are so many things that Trump should go to prison for, which he never will. He should go to prison for what he did on January 6. He should go to prison for what he did to migrant families. If there were justice, he would go to prison for what he did to E Jean Carroll and allegedly to any number of the two dozen other women who have accused him of sexual assault. He might never go to prison, and there’s still a long way to go before anything like true justice is served.But for those of us who had despaired of a day like this – who had convinced ourselves that to think he would ever be convicted of anything was childishly naive – this is a very good day. We can be happy, among other things, that we were wrong.
    Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist More

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    Trump was found guilty – what could his punishment be?

    A Manhattan jury has convicted Donald Trump on all 34 counts of falsifying business records in the hush-money case.The immediate next question is: what punishment the former US president should receive?It’s a decision that rests entirely with Juan Merchan, the judge overseeing the case. The crimes Trump has been found guilty of, falsifying business records in the first degree, are class E felonies in New York, the least serious category, and punishable by up to four years in prison. His sentencing is set for 11 July.But Trump is unlikely to be sentenced to prison, experts say. He is a first-time offender, and the crime he has been found guilty of is a non-violent paper crime.“I think the judge would probably not incarcerate him under those circumstances alone,” said Cheryl Bader, a law professor at Fordham University who called any sentence of incarceration “unlikely”.“But also given that he is a former president, has a Secret Service detail and is also the presumptive Republican nominee, I think a term of incarceration would be logistically very difficult, but also would have political implications that I think Judge Merchan would want to avoid.”Any punishment is likely to consist of fines, probation, community service or some combination of those.“I would like to see community service – picking up trash on the subway,” said Karen Friedman Agnifilo, a former top prosecutor in the Manhattan district attorney’s office.Much could depend on how Merchan interprets Trump’s conduct, including any lack of remorse.“I can’t imagine we will see a remorseful, apologetic Trump if it comes time for sentencing,” Bader said. “Judges also consider the harm caused. On one hand, Judge Merchan could view this as a technical recording violation to cover up tawdry conduct, causing only minimal harm. On the other hand, he could view Trump’s conduct as inflicting deep harm on the entire country by depriving the voting public of their right to cast an informed vote in the highest-ranking national election.”The jury did not have the option of convicting Trump of a misdemeanor – of falsifying business records but not in service of another underlying crime. Trump’s attorneys could have asked Merchan to give the jury that option, but they did not do so.Both the prosecutors and Trump’s lawyers will submit recommendations for sentencing. So too will the probation office, which will put together a confidential presentencing report for the judge.Trump will almost certainly quickly appeal. Any punishment would then probably be on hold while an appeal is pending.The appellate process would take months, even years, to play out, meaning it could be a while before the sentence would take effect. Trump has 30 days to file a notice of appeal of the guilty verdict, and then six months to file a full appeal to the first judicial department, which hears appeals from New York county. If a conviction were upheld, Trump would then likely appeal to the New York court of appeals, the seven-member body that is the highest appellate court in New York state. That court has discretion over whether to hear the case or not.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionThe issues argued on appeal would likely be complex legal questions – for example, whether the judge gave appropriate instructions to the jury and allowed the right evidence to be included or excluded. Facts, and the credibility of witnesses, would not be issues on appeal.If the conviction is upheld by the New York court of appeals, Trump would likely appeal to the US supreme court, which could also choose whether or not to take the case. Because the case is under New York state law, getting it into the US supreme court would require Trump to convince the justices that there is some federal or constitutional question at stake.The conviction will not affect Trump’s legal ability to run for president. The constitution does not bar felons from running for office. Whether he could serve as president from prison is untested. He would not be able to pardon himself from any conviction, since it is a state crime.The conviction will probably not affect Trump’s ability to vote in this fall’s election. Florida, where he is registered, allows people with an out-of-state conviction to vote if the state where they were convicted allows it. In New York, someone with a felony conviction can vote as long as they are not incarcerated.Merchan has already punished Trump twice during the case for violating a gag order in place, and the way the judge handled both episodes could offer insight into how he will approach any possible punishment for Trump. It underscores that Merchan is keenly aware of the logistical difficulty of incarcerating Trump and the broader political implications of doing so.“Mr Trump, it’s important to understand that the last thing I want to do is to put you in jail. You are the former president of the United States and possibly the next president, as well,” Merchan said on 6 May, when he issued a $1,000 fine holding Trump in contempt of court for the 10th time. He went on to explain why putting Trump in jail at that time was “truly a last resort for me … I also worry about the people who would have to execute that sanction: the court officers, the correction officers, the Secret Service detail, among others. I worry about them and about what would go into executing such a sanction.“Of course, I’m also aware of the broader implications of such a sanction. The magnitude of such a decision is not one-sided. But, at the end of the day, I have a job to do, and part of that job is to protect the dignity of the judicial system and compel respect,” he added. More

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    Trump was just convicted of conspiracy and fraud. He could still win re-election | Lloyd Green

    On Thursday, a Manhattan jury found Donald Trump guilty of all 34 counts of conspiracy and fraud in a case stemming from payments that the former president arranged to cover up an affair with the adult film actor Stormy Daniels. The presumptive Republican nominee is now a convicted felon.He was already an adjudicated sexual predator and fraudster. Trump once quipped that he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and get away with it. Maybe not.Sentencing has been set for 11 July. Of course, it is unlikely that Trump will serve time in prison for what amounts to a bookkeeping offense. Rather, he could be placed on probation and required to report to New York City’s probation department, which has been described as a “humbling” experience. Regardless, the conviction does not disqualify him as a candidate or bar him from again sitting in the Oval Office.Practically speaking, Americans who support Joe Biden must internalize that Trump’s conviction is unlikely to greatly impact his odds of being re-elected president – which are already far higher than many Democrats care to acknowledge. The betting markets are in his corner.The deadline for further motions is 27 June, which is also the day of the first presidential debate. Trump, who denied the charges against him, had previously branded the trial “rigged” and a “scam”. As he exited the courthouse on Thursday, he told watching cameras: “This was a rigged, disgraceful trial. The real verdict is going to be November 5th, by the people.”In the aftermath of his defeat in 2016 in the Iowa caucus and again after losing to Biden in 2020, he resorted to the same playbook. Regardless, his disgrace and lust for vengeance are real. Just look at January 6. Someone who would otherwise be barred from obtaining a security clearance could be the next president. For its part, the Republican party, the so-called law-and-order party, has embraced a convicted criminal as its standard-bearer.Defeat in a New York courtroom, however, is not the same as a Trump loss in November. The 45th president possesses the good fortune of running against an 81-year-old with a halting gait and tentative mien.The calendar will quickly test whatever boost Biden garners from his predecessor’s criminal conviction.On 3 June, the trial of Hunter Biden on federal gun charges kicks off in Delaware. Seemingly clueless to this reality, the president hosted his prodigal son at a recent state dinner for William Ruto, the president of Kenya. Hunter Biden also faces a trial on criminal tax charges in early September, just as the fall campaign begins in earnest.By the end of June, the US supreme court too may provide Trump with another boost. It is expected that the Republican-dominated high court will further slow the special counsel’s election interference case against Trump, ostensibly over the issue of presidential immunity.Last, the first presidential debate is slated for 27 June. Four years have passed since Biden and a Covid-carrying Trump squared off before the cameras. Trump came in too hot while Biden bobbed and weaved. Biden also dinged fossil fuels, making the race in Pennsylvania closer than necessary.However you slice it, Biden’s post-State of the Union resurgence is over. He persistently trails Trump in the critical battleground states. He runs behind the Democratic Senate candidates in places like Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania.Let’s be clear, the rejection is to some extent personal. Unabated doubts swirl about Biden’s continued capacity to lead and govern. Most Americans view Biden as incapable of taming inflation, let alone securing the border.“Working-class voters are unhappy about President Biden’s economy,” Axios reports.Beyond that, the sting of inflation is actually sharper in the precincts of so-called red America. Ominously for the incumbent, his difficulties with non-college graduates cut across race and ethnicity.David Axelrod, chief political adviser to Barack Obama, has taken Biden – Obama’s vice-president – to task. It’s “absolutely true” that the economy has grown under Biden, Axelrod told CNN, but voters are “experiencing [the economy] through the lens of the cost of living. And he is a man who’s built his career on empathy. Why not lead with the empathy?”Instead, Biden keeps touting his own record to tepid applause.“If he doesn’t win this race, it may not be Donald Trump that beats him,” Axelrod continued. “It may be his own pride.”By the numbers, Biden leads among suburban moms and dads and households earning more than $50,000, but lags among people with lower incomes. His voting base bears little resemblance to the lunch-bucket coalition that powered Franklin D Roosevelt and John F Kennedy to the White House last century.“We keep wondering why these young people are not coming home to the Democrats. Why are [Black voters] not coming home to the Democrats?” James Carville, the campaign guru behind Bill Clinton’s win in 1992, recently lamented. “Because Democrat messaging is full of shit, that’s why.”Once upon a time, Carville coined the phrase: “It’s the economy, stupid.” Three decades have not diminished its truth or resonance.Similarly, Biden ignores the reality that he must hug the cultural center as he tacks leftward on economics. Working Americans want stability, safe streets and a paycheck that takes them far. Campus radicals, riots and identity politics are a turnoff.Both Trump and Biden have aged and slowed down since their paths first crossed. Trump continues to display manic stamina on the stump. In contrast, Biden’s events are uninspired, under-attended and over-scripted. For the president, “spontaneity” is synonymous with “gaffe”.Whether Biden brings his A-game to the June debate may determine his fate. If he fails, expect a long summer for the Democrats. Indeed, the party’s convention set for Chicago may rekindle unpleasant memories of 1968. And we know how that ended.To win, Biden must quickly capitalize on Trump’s conviction. The jury is out on whether the 46th president possesses the requisite skill-set.
    Lloyd Green is an attorney in New York and served in the US Department of Justice from 1990 to 1992 More

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    Donald Trump found guilty of hush-money plot to influence 2016 election

    Donald Trump has been found guilty of all 34 counts of falsifying business records in a criminal hush-money scheme to influence the outcome of the 2016 election.The verdict came after a jury deliberated for less than 12 hours in the unprecedented first criminal trial against a US president, current or former. It marks a perilous political moment for Trump, the presumptive nominee for the Republican nomination, whose poll numbers have remained unchanged throughout the trial but could tank at any moment.Trump was convicted by a jury of 12 New Yorkers of felony falsification of business records, which makes it a crime for a person to make or cause false entries in records with the intent to commit a second crime. He will be sentenced on 11 July at 10am ET.“This was a rigged trial by a conflicted judge who was corrupt,” Trump said at the courthouse after the verdict was read. “This was a rigged trial, a disgrace.”Joe Biden’s campaign hit back in an email sent soon after the verdict.“In New York today, we saw that no one is above the law. Donald Trump has always mistakenly believed he would never face consequences for breaking the law for his own personal gain,” wrote communications director Michael Tyler.“But today’s verdict does not change the fact that the American people face a simple reality. There is still only one way to keep Donald Trump out of the Oval Office: at the ballot box. Convicted felon or not, Trump will be the Republican nominee for president.””In Trump’s case, the Manhattan district attorney’s office alleged Trump falsely recorded the reimbursements he made to his former lawyer Michael Cohen, who paid the adult film star Stormy Daniels $130,000 for her silence about her affair with Trump, as “legal expenses”.The prosecution alleged the falsifications were made to conceal Trump’s violation of New York state election law, which makes it a crime to promote the election of any person to office through unlawful means.Prosecutors argued in part that those unlawful means were the $130,000 payment to Daniels, which was in effect an illegal campaign contribution, because it was done solely for the benefit of his 2016 campaign and exceeded the $2,700 individual contribution cap.The Manhattan district attorney’s office called 20 witnesses who, over the course of four weeks, gave evidence of how Trump plotted with the tabloid mogul David Pecker and Cohen to bury accounts of affairs with Daniels and the Playboy model Karen McDougal.The witnesses – some friendly to Trump, others openly hostile – said Trump’s worry over the Daniels story intensified after the October 2016 release of the infamous Access Hollywood tape, in which Trump was caught on a hot mic bragging about sexual assault.The recording featured Trump boasting about being able to grab women “by the pussy” without their consent because he was famous. Trial witnesses testified the Trump campaign worried that his efforts to dismiss the tape as “locker room talk” would fail if more boorish behavior came to light.When the Daniels story threatened to become widely known weeks before the 2016 election, Cohen moved into action and paid Daniels $130,000 to buy the exclusive rights to her story – in order to suppress its publication.After the 2016 election, prosecutors argued, Cohen worked out an illicit repayment plan in which he would be paid $420,000, an inflated sum that “grossed up” for tax reasons the $130,000 and other items Cohen billed.The trial saw prosecutors elicit testimony from Cohen, Daniels and a parade of Trump’s confidants and employees, as they sought to establish that Trump concealed the alleged payoff scheme in an effort to ensure he would not lose support from female voters.Cohen proved to be perhaps the most legally consequential witness for the prosecution, as he recounted how he used a home equity loan to raise the $130,000 he then wired to Daniels’ lawyer through a shell company. Cohen did so in the belief that Trump would reimburse him, he testified.In January 2017, Cohen said, he discussed with Trump and the former Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg about being repaid for the $130,000, an overdue bonus and other expenses he incurred doing work that benefited the Trump 2016 campaign.Cohen produced 11 invoices seeking payment pursuant to a legal “retainer” that did not exist, according to Cohen, which led to 11 checks being cut to Cohen and the Trump Organization recording 12 entries for “legal expense” on its general ledger – totaling 34 instances of alleged falsifications.Cohen, who was the final witness for the prosecution, said that Trump was furious when he learned that Daniels was on the verge of going public – not least because Cohen had previously worked with Daniels’ lawyer Keith Davidson, in 2011, to remove the affair story from a gossip website.“Just take care of it,” Cohen recalled Trump saying. “This was a disaster, a fucking disaster. Women will hate me.”“Would you have made that payment to Stormy Daniels without getting a sign-off from Mr Trump?” prosecutor Susan Hoffinger asked Cohen.“No, because everything required Mr Trump’s sign-off. And on top of that, I wanted the money back,” Cohen said.Cohen said that he filed bogus invoices for legal services to cover up the reimbursements, and repeatedly said that Trump was the force behind the Daniels plot. He carried out the payoff “to ensure that the story would not come out, would not affect Mr Trump’s chances of becoming president of the United States”.In a watershed moment, Cohen told jurors these repayments started not long after an 8 February 2017 meeting with Trump in the Oval Office, where they talked about money. Cohen hadn’t been repaid anything for the payoff.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotion“So, I was sitting with President Trump and he asked me if I was OK, he asked me if I needed money, and I said: ‘No, all good’,” Cohen told jurors. “He said, ‘All right, just make sure you deal with Allen.’”“Allen” referenced Allen Weisselberg, the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer at the time, who was recently incarcerated for lying at Trump’s recent civil fraud trial. Weisselberg had previously pleaded guilty to tax crimes, for which he was also jailed.Cohen submitted $35,000 invoices for each month, listing the bill as for legal services. He said it was actually for “the reimbursement, to me, of the hush-money fee along with [another expense] and the bonus”.Hoffinger went through every invoice and pay document and asked Cohen whether it was for legal services – or false. Cohen repeatedly said that the descriptions of invoices and payments in emails and business documents were, in fact, false.“What I was doing was at the direction of and benefit of Mr Trump,” Cohen said at one point, among the many times he directly implicated Trump. “Everything required Mr Trump’s sign-off.”Daniels provided stunning testimony that undermined Trump’s denials that they had sex following a celebrity golf event in Lake Tahoe nearly two decades ago. After rejecting Trump’s invitation to dinner, Daniels decided to go at the advice of a colleague, who said: “It’ll make a great story.”Daniels said that she went to Trump’s hotel room, and they decided to chat before grabbing something to eat. He asked over and over about her work as an adult film actor, repeatedly asking her questions such as: “What about testing? Do you worry about STDs?” Had she been tested?“Yes, of course, and I volunteered it as well,” Daniels said. “He asked me, oh, well, have you ever had a bad test? I said: ‘Nope, I can show you my entire record.’”Trump started to show photos to Daniels at one point, including one of Melania, about which she commented that his wife was “very beautiful” – but allegedly added she should not worry about Melania because “we don’t even sleep in the same room”.They spoke about Trump’s show, The Apprentice, and Daniels remarked there would be no way she would make it on TV given her line of work.“You remind me of my daughter, she is smart and blonde and beautiful and people underestimate her as well,” Daniels remembered Trump saying.Daniels excused herself for the restroom, which was through a bedroom. When she came out, Trump was on the bed, in his underwear and a T-shirt.“At first I was just startled, like a jump scare,” Daniels said. “I just thought: oh my God, what did I misread to get here? The intention is pretty clear if someone’s stripped down to their underwear and on the bed.”Daniels tried to leave but he stood between her and the door, albeit “not in a threatening manner”, she said.“He said, I thought we were getting somewhere. I thought you were serious about what you wanted, if you want to get out of that trailer park … ” Daniels testified. “I was offended, because I never lived in a trailer park.” Daniels said they had sex.The description of the hotel room encounter was uncomfortable and cringe-inducing testimony, one of the prosecutors suggested in closing arguments. But that was precisely why Trump was so desperate to suppress the story – and conceal that he had done so.“This scheme, cooked up by these men, at this time, could very well be what got President Trump elected,” the prosecutor Joshua Steinglass said. More