San Diego Union-Tribune

DESANTIS, HALEY SAY THEY WOULD PARDON TRUMP

Both pledge to offer clemency if GOP rival is convicted

- BY REIS THEBAULT Thebault writes for The Washington Post.

Donald Trump’s leading Republican primary challenger­s said in recent days that if they are elected, they would pardon the former president should he be convicted of any of the 91 felony charges he’s currently facing.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former governor of South Carolina Nikki Haley argued in separate campaign stops last week that extending clemency to Trump would be in the country’s best interest. Both had previously signaled they were leaning toward issuing a pardon, but their recent statements were the most definitive yet and left little room for doubt just weeks before the first nominating contests in January.

“I would pardon Trump if he is found guilty,” Haley told a crowd in Plymouth, N.H., on Thursday.

DeSantis, who has blamed Trump’s dominance in the polls in part on the string of criminal indictment­s, said Friday that he would pardon a convicted Trump because “we’ve got to move on as a country.” Speaking with reporters after a campaign stop in Elkader, Iowa, DeSantis echoed Haley’s commitment, invoking the only previous time a U.S. president has received a pardon.

“It’s like Ford did to Nixon,” DeSantis said, referencin­g Gerald Ford’s 1974 pardon of disgraced former President Richard Nixon. “Because you just, you know, the divisions are just not in the country’s interest.”

DeSantis and Haley, who are leading a winnowed field of GOP candidates opposing Trump, have for months walked a political tightrope, seeking to distinguis­h themselves from the former president while continuing to court his substantia­l bloc of supporters, whose votes will be key in deciding the Republican primary.

Aside from Trump, who has remained the clear leader in polling and campaign fundraisin­g, three of the GOP’s top four candidates have now said unequivoca­lly that they would pardon him, with entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy committing to the move in July.

Ex-New Jersey governor Chris Christie, meanwhile, has railed against these pledges, calling Trump’s actions a threat to democracy. A pardon for Trump, Christie said on Friday, would signal “two systems of justice: one for all of us and one for the most powerful.”

“If we allow that to happen as a country, we would be no better — no better — than a lot of these tinpot democracie­s around the world who treat the privileged different than they treat everyday citizens,” Christie said at an event in Seabrook, N.H.

Trump is facing 44 federal charges and 47 state charges across four separate criminal cases. The federal charges with the most severe penalties are those concerning allegation­s of obstructio­n of justice, which in typical cases can result in up to 20 years of imprisonme­nt. Defendants, however, rarely receive maximum sentences and it is not clear whether Trump would be imprisoned if convicted.

Despite the against him, Trump has retained a wide lead in polls ahead of the 2024 primary, which officially begins in less than a month with a caucus in Iowa and voting in New Hampshire. According to FiveThirty­Eight’s polling average, Trump held a nearly 50-point lead over his two closest rivals, DeSantis and Haley, as of Sunday.

In New Hampshire, Trump’s lead was smaller but still commanding, with 46 percent of potential voters supporting him, 28 points more than the next closest candidate, according to a Washington PostMonmou­th University poll.

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