Boston Herald

Brace for a boomerang

Biden may regret DOJ gunning for Trump

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The latest indictment of former President Donald Trump could have a boomerang effect on President Biden if voters feel the case is just an attempt to stop Trump from running.

If the latest charges against Trump start to fall apart, it will throw the spotlight back on Democrats and Biden, and confirm what half the country believes — that this is a politicall­y motivated prosecutio­n.

Trump, about to turn 77, is still in a precarious position heading into 2024, with possible indictment­s related to Jan. 6 and Georgia still to go. Just from a stamina point of view, it will be tough for Trump to survive the heat.

But polls conducted after the 37-count indictment on classified documents was released show the former president is still the frontrunne­r in the GOP race. A clear majority of Republican primary voters — 81% — say they believe the indictment for illegally keeping secret documents and lying about it is politicall­y motivated.

That’s a clear indication that the charges won’t yet hurt Trump’s cause in the GOP primaries, and may in fact boost him. A new Reuters poll showed 43% of Republican­s support Trump, while just 22% picked Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

But it’s still early and those numbers could change as more evidence comes back against Trump.

Trump is now in Miami in preparatio­n for his court appearance on Tuesday, but he is already defiant in denying the indictment.

“I HOPE THE ENTIRE COUNTRY IS WATCHING WHAT THE RADICAL LEFT ARE DOING TO AMERICA,” he posted on his Truth Social site.

The question now is, will the spotlight eventually come back to Biden and his own problem with keeping classified documents in his garage?

And will voters blame Biden for bringing the case against Trump, despite the president’s attempts to stay away from it?

It’s pretty hard for Biden to claim he knows nothing about the indictment­s. Difficult to believe the Department of Justice wouldn’t at least brief the White House about the coming charges. The DOJ is part of the administra­tion, along with the FBI.

If the latest indictment starts to fizzle, it could be bad news for the president and rocket fuel for Trump, much the same way the collapse of the Russian collusion case helped the former president.

Republican voters — and many independen­ts — seem inclined to side with Trump right now in this latest attempt to wound him legally. And they are bound to take it out against Biden.

At the very least, the case against Trump is likely to drag on well past next year’s election, meaning voters will have to decide based on incomplete informatio­n.

The 80-year-old Biden — if he really does follow through with his reelection plans — better hope that Americans start to turn against his former rival soon, or there will be a reversal of the 2020 election — no matter how many indictment­s they bring.

 ?? MEG KINNARD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former President Donald Trump points at the media during his remarks at the North Carolina Republican Party Convention on Saturday in Greensboro, N.C.
MEG KINNARD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former President Donald Trump points at the media during his remarks at the North Carolina Republican Party Convention on Saturday in Greensboro, N.C.
 ?? ANNA ROSE LAYDEN — GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? President Biden would lose to Donald Trump -- if the election were held today, polls say.
ANNA ROSE LAYDEN — GETTY IMAGES/TNS President Biden would lose to Donald Trump -- if the election were held today, polls say.
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