Analysis-How Trump will use Stormy Daniels case to fire up his campaign
for 2024 election
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[March 22, 2023]
By Nathan Layne and Gram Slattery
(Reuters) -Donald Trump will try to turn any indictment to his advantage
by stoking anger among core supporters over what they see as the
weaponization of the justice system, though it may also push more
Republicans tired of the drama around him to look for another
presidential candidate.
A Manhattan grand jury could bring charges as soon as this week against
the former Republican president for alleged hush money payments made to
porn star Stormy Daniels during his 2016 presidential campaign. Trump
has denied having an affair with Daniels, whose legal name is Stephanie
Clifford.
While the prosecution of a former president is unprecedented in U.S.
history and places Trump in legal peril, it will likely be viewed by his
most loyal supporters as politically motivated and only harden their
determination to back him in the 2024 Republican primary, party
officials, strategists and political analysts told Reuters.
"I think this will strengthen the resolve of his supporters," said Ford
O'Connell, a Republican strategist who represented Trump in many media
appearances during the 2020 presidential campaign.
But to win the party's nomination, Trump will likely have to broaden his
support beyond the 25%-30% of the Republican electorate generally
thought to be in his corner no matter what, especially if the field of
Republican candidates narrows in the coming months. An indictment could
make it difficult for him to broaden his appeal.
Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of
Virginia, said some Republicans could be swayed by the charges to back
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis or another potential candidate without
Trump's legal baggage, which has grown considerably since he left the
White House in 2021.
"It’s not good for Trump, the question is how bad for Trump it is," said
Sabato. "There could be multiple indictments ... it begins to add up to
a major problem."
Trump's campaign has accused the Manhattan District Attorney's office,
as well as prosecutors pursuing separate cases against him in Georgia
and at the federal level, of doing the bidding of Democrats out to stop
his re-election campaign.
People close to Trump said his campaign would seek to frame the
indictment as proof that all prosecutions - including his two
impeachments in Congress - are unjustified attempts by the "Deep State"
to undermine him and his supporters.
Trump will have more social media outlets to get his message across
after YouTube became the latest platform to reinstate him on Friday.
Trump was cut off from YouTube, Facebook and Twitter following the Jan.
6, 2021, attack by his supporters on the U.S. Capitol. He has now been
reinstated on all three, giving him a powerful megaphone to rally his
base, as he did effectively during his 2016 White House run.
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Supporters of former U.S. President
Donald Trump attend a gathering outside his Mar-a-Lago resort after
he posted a message on his Truth Social account saying that he
expects to be arrested on Tuesday, and called on his supporters to
protest, in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., March 20, 2023.
REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo
It is unclear how Trump's rivals for the Republican nomination will
approach the indictment, although several have already made clear
they view any attempt to charge Trump as politically motivated.
Sam DeMarco, chair of the Republican Party in Pennsylvania's
Allegheny County, said candidates will likely allude to the need for
less drama without explicitly calling Trump out.
DeSantis got a taste of that on Monday when he criticized what he
said was the politicization of the Manhattan DA's office but also
took a veiled swipe at his rival. Trump responded aggressively with
an innuendo-filled post on his Truth Social platform.
'TEFLON DON'
DeMarco said Republicans would view the Manhattan indictment as
political, given that federal prosecutors reviewed the Daniels case
in 2018 and decided not to charge Trump, although it is Justice
Department policy not to indict a sitting president.
Republicans would take a similar view of any charges arising out of
the ongoing investigation in Fulton County, Georgia, into Trump's
effort to overturn his 2020 loss to Democrat Joe Biden there, said
DeMarco, who plans to vote for DeSantis should he run.
Trump has defied predictions of his demise numerous times since he
launched his bid for the White House in 2015. Sometimes called
"Teflon Don" for his record of skirting accountability, Trump once
bragged that he could gun down someone in the middle of Manhattan
and not face consequences.
Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016 despite the
emergence of the infamous "Access Hollywood" tape in which he made
vulgar comments about women. And in 2018, when he was president, he
paid no apparent political price for the Stormy Daniels affair, even
as his lawyer went to prison for arranging the payments and pointed
the finger at Trump.
Trump remains the front-runner in the 2024 Republican field, with
the support of 44% of Republicans in a Reuters/Ipsos poll completed
on Monday, ahead of DeSantis' 30% support.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut, and Gram Slattery
in Washington; Editing by Ross Colvin, Daniel Wallis and Lisa
Shumaker)
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