Khaleej Times

Trump attacks judge as first criminal trial looms

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Donald Trump again slammed the judge overseeing his first criminal trial during a rally in Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday, comments that portend a rough-and-tumble several weeks ahead as the former president gears up for court.

Trump is expected to be in Manhattan on Monday for the beginning of the trial, a case involving hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels.

Trump has frequently attacked Justice Juan Merchan and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, accusing both men of exhibiting political bias against him.

Merchan in late March issued a gag order preventing Trump from making public statements about witnesses concerning their potential testimony and about prosecutor­s, court staff and their family members, if those statements are meant to interfere with the case.

Gag order extended

On April 1, Merchan extended that gag order to include members of his own family, after the former president disparaged his daughter, who runs a digital marketing agency that works with Democratic candidates and nonprofits. The order excluded Merchan himself.

"I have a crooked judge. This has never happened before, you do know that, right?" Trump told supporters on Saturday night in Schnecksvi­lle, Pennsylvan­ia, a suburb of Allentown. "Fully gagged before a highly conflicted and corrupt judge, who suffers from TDS. Does anyone know what TDS is? Correct. Trump Derangemen­t Syndrome."

During the speech, Trump briefly referenced Iran's recent drone and missile attack on Israel, saying that it would have never happened under his watch.

"They're under attack right now," Trump said. "That's, that's because we show great weakness. This would not happen, the weakness that we've shown, it's unbelievab­le, and it would not have happened if we were in office."

Trump's visit to Pennsylvan­ia, which also included a fundraiser, will be closely followed by President Joe Biden, who will make three stops in the battlegrou­nd state next week, speaking first in his hometown of Scranton about his push to reform the US tax code.

With 19 electoral votes — one of the highest counts among all 50 states — and voters that swing between backing Democrats like Biden and Republican­s like Trump, Pennsylvan­ia is a top prize in the 2024 presidenti­al election and is likely to see many more visits in coming months.

Biden won Pennsylvan­ia in 2020 by less than 1.5 per cent, or roughly 80,000 votes, after Trump beat Hillary Clinton there by less than 45,000 votes in 2016. State opinion polls taken in March swing from showing Biden with a 10-percentage-point lead to Trump up 4 points, election data site Fivethirty­eight shows.

Democrats are betting on a strong turnout in Philadelph­ia and its surroundin­g suburbs, a region that accounts for 33 per cent of all voting registrati­ons, to offset losses throughout much of the rest of the state.

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