Houston Chronicle Sunday

Indictment pushes election into new territory

- By Jill Colvin

NEW YORK — The historic indictment of former President Donald Trump thrust the 2024 presidenti­al election into uncharted territory, raising the remarkable prospect that the leading contender for the Republican nomination will seek the White House while also facing trial on criminal charges in New York.

In an acknowledg­ment of the sway the former president holds with the voters who will decide the GOP contest next year, those eyeing a primary challenge to Trump were quick to criticize the indictment. Without naming Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis called the move “un-American.” Former Vice President Mike Pence, whose life was threatened after Trump incited an insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, told CNN the charges were “outrageous.”

That posture speaks to the short-term incentives for Republican­s to avoid anything that might antagonize Trump's loyal base. But the indictment raises profound questions for the GOP's future, particular­ly as Trump faces the possibilit­y of additional charges soon in Atlanta and Washington, D.C. While that might galvanize his supporters, the turmoil could threaten the GOP's standing in the very swing state suburbs that have abandoned the party in three successive elections, eroding its grip on the White House, Congress and key governorsh­ips.

Trump has spent four decades managing to skirt this type of legal jeopardy and expressed confidence again late Thursday, blaming the charges on “Thugs and Radical Left Monsters.”

“THIS IS AN ATTACK ON OUR COUNTRY THE LIKES OF WHICH HAS NEVER BEEN SEEN BEFORE,” Trump wrote on his social media site.

Trump is “ready to fight,” his attorney, Joe Tacopina, said on Fox News.

Trump is expected to surrender to authoritie­s next week on charges connected to hush money payments made during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign to women who alleged extramarit­al sexual encounters. For now, it is unclear how the developmen­t will resonate with voters. Polls show Trump remains the undisputed front-runner for the Republican nomination, and his standing has not faltered, even amid widespread reporting on the expected charges.

Trump's campaign and his allies have long hoped an indictment would serve as a rallying cry for his supporters, angering his “Make America Great Again” base, drawing small dollar donations and forcing Trump's potential rivals into the awkward position of having to defend him — or risk their wrath.

Trump's campaign began fundraisin­g off the news almost immediatel­y after it broke, firing an email to supporters with the all-caps subject line “BREAKING: PRESIDENT TRUMP INDICTED.”

At Trump's first rally of the 2024 campaign, held in Waco last weekend, supporters expressed widespread disgust with the investigat­ion and insisted that the case wouldn't affect his chances.

“It's a joke,” said Patti Murphy, 63, of Fort Worth. “It's just another way of them trying to get him out of their way.”

Others in the crowd said their support for Trump had been waning since he left the White House but that the looming indictment made them more likely to support him in 2024 because they felt his anger had been justified. At the same time, there is little chance a criminal trial will help Trump in a general election, particular­ly with independen­ts, who have grown tired of his constant chaos. That has provided an opening for alternativ­es, such as DeSantis, who are expected to paint themselves as champions of the former president's policies but without all his baggage.

But there were no immediate signs that the Republican Party was ready to use the indictment to move past him. Instead, Republican­s, including members of Congress and Trump's rivals, rushed to his defense en masse. In addition to DeSantis, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who has already declared her candidacy, blasted the indictment as “more about revenge than it is about justice.” Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who is mulling a run, accused Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg of “underminin­g America's confidence in our legal system,” while also sending a fundraisin­g text off the news.

An indictment — or even a conviction — would not bar Trump from running for president or serving as the Republican nominee.

 ?? Josie Norris/Staff photograph­er ?? Donald Trump held a rally last weekend in Waco, where he railed against the hush money case in front of thousands of supporters.
Josie Norris/Staff photograph­er Donald Trump held a rally last weekend in Waco, where he railed against the hush money case in front of thousands of supporters.

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