But how strange his relatively boyish adventures seem today when compared to Donald Trump’s X-rated engagement to a porn star while his wife Melania was recovering from childbirth. President Trump’s brief encounter during a golf tournament occurred before he took office, and he could point to President Clinton mistreating a young staffer in his Oval Office in clear violation of workplace laws.
And you can run to the bathroom and be miserable.
Funny thing is, I’ve never heard Melania take on huge responsibilities. left– Tsubasa’s plot to eliminate her husband. Perhaps if there is such a surgery, she will enroll. Get her number, honey. But the ongoing conspiracy is perhaps the most expansive and right-wing ever, and the master conspirator is Trump himself. If he said that day is night, his followers would sleep while the sun shines. Through forgery and deceit, he created a force field around himself, protecting himself from consequences and putting his followers into a trance.
If President Trump doesn’t like negative news coverage about him, it’s “fake news.” If he says the 2020 election was “stolen” from him, it must be so. If prosecutors charge him with inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, that would be a conspiracy. Even the U.S. Supreme Court seems to be under his spell.
The justices announced Wednesday that they would consider Trump’s claim that he is protected from prosecution for his actions while in office. That means his federal trial on charges of conspiracy to overturn the 2020 election results will likely be postponed for the duration of the election. Oral arguments are scheduled for the week of April 22nd. At issue is a unanimous decision by a panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals that rejected President Trump’s claim for immunity from prosecution. Again, unanimous. No one is above the law, including the President of the United States, so what happened?
The court’s unsigned order said the justices had not “expressed a view on the merits” and that “former presidents enjoy presidential immunity from criminal prosecution for conduct they allegedly engaged in while in office.” He said his only consideration would be whether the exemption is valid and, if so, to what extent. At work. “
Had Mr. Trump been tried as originally scheduled and convicted, voters would have known the outcome before the election. Now that his nomination is all but certain, he could possibly be elected president and then have to stand trial — meaning the high court ruled that his presidency does not protect him from prosecution. Assume that a judgment has been made. Now that his nomination is all but certain, he could possibly be elected president and then have to stand trial — meaning the high court ruled that his presidency does not protect him from prosecution. Assume that a judgment has been made.
The earliest we know is likely to be May or June, when courts recess for the summer, after which it could be months before criminal trials resume. In the meantime, Mr. Trump can put aside the lawsuits that would have taken up much of his time and kept him away from his campaign.
My mind is incapable of calculating what would happen if Mr. Trump were elected and then went to court while still president. He faces four felonies related to an alleged plot to overturn the election. These are conspiracy to obstruct Congress’ certification of Biden’s victory, filibustering, conspiracy to commit fraud against the United States, and conspiracy against rights, the right to vote.
Considering what we know from multiple investigations, it seems likely that a jury will find Trump guilty on all counts. For 187 minutes, protesters invaded the Capitol, ignoring urgent pleas for intervention from Trump’s chief of staff, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R.S., and Trump’s daughter Ivanka. There is overwhelming evidence that he was watching. By the time he told the crowd to “stand back,” the first two of the five people were dead, both protesters with medical emergencies, and Deputy Mike Pence. The president and dozens of other officials were on the run, and dozens were injured. . We are all well aware of the aftermath.
The true Teflon candidate, once Clinton’s nickname, appears to be Trump. Teflon T lamp. When he once said he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and his supporters would still love him, he wasn’t kidding. Of course, such an event is unlikely, and presidential immunity certainly does not apply to deadly acts of violence. But what if a re-elected President Trump were to weaponize the FBI and Justice Department to punish his political opponents, as he promised last November? This sounds like a conspiracy to me, but Russian President Vladimir Putin, and today’s Republican Party, would praise its enormous impact.