Will rule of law succeed where Congress failed
and hold Trump accountable?
If the grand jury goes against him, Trump would be the
first former US president charged with a crime
‘I think it’s a potential sign that it looks like
Donald Trump is moving on from the presidency to his next turn on TV, which is
as a defendant.’
David Smith
in Washington
@smithinamerica
Thu 27 May
2021 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/may/27/trump-grand-jury-new-york-investigation
Standing in
court, the former president pleaded not guilty to charges of financial crimes
that he insists are part of a politically motivated witch hunt. Jacob Zuma,
once the populist leader of South Africa, cut a humbled figure on Wednesday –
and offered a potential glimpse of America’s future.
A similar
fate for Donald Trump became significantly more likely with reports that New
York prosecutors have convened a grand jury to decide whether to indict him on
criminal charges.
The jurists
will examine evidence gathered during the Manhattan district attorney’s
two-year investigation into the former US president’s business dealings and
alleged hush money payments to women on his behalf.
There is a
long way to go, but it is a sign that the long arm of the law may reach parts
where Congress, in particular the Republican party, consistently failed by
holding Trump accountable for his actions.
Prosecutors
have a decent chance of maintaining the perception of independence because the
decision whether to bring charges rests with a jury of citizens studying
evidence in secret rather than with Democrat Joe Biden’s Department of Justice.
Biden and
his attorney general, Merrick Garland, will be sure to stay as far away from
the case as possible to avoid any hint of political interference. If the jury
goes against him, Trump would be the first former US president charged with a
crime.
This would
surely produce the trial of the century, a fittingly Trumpian spectacle
dominating every screen. Neal Katyal, a former acting solicitor general, told
the MSNBC network: “I think it’s a potential sign that it looks like Donald
Trump is moving on from the presidency to his next turn on TV, which is as a
defendant.”
A criminal
conviction and jail sentence would be seen by America’s admirers as evidence of
the rule of law – and by its detractors as the vindictive pursuit of a former
leader reminiscent of a failing state.
Trump is
bound to play on such fears when he soon resumes campaign rallies. He said in a
statement on Tuesday: “This is a continuation of the greatest Witch Hunt in
American history.”
He added
pointedly: “Interesting that today a poll came out indicating I’m far in the
lead for the Republican Presidential Primary and the General Election in 2024.”
The fact
that the message is tired and predictable makes it no less potent among his
core supporters. Special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation, and the
Democrats’ impeachment of Trump over his quid pro quo with the Ukraine, became
regular foils for Trump on the campaign trail.
When the
rallies resume, expect to hear these golden oldies combined with some new
material: how the 6 January insurrection was actually a fun day out with
supporters kissing police, only to be hijacked by antifa; and how the Manhattan
district attorney’s case is a Democratic conspiracy designed to thwart any
Trump re-election plans.
Prosecutors
cannot allow such nonsense to blow them off course; Trump will always find some
grievance to weaponise. With the help of rightwing media and an acquiescent
Republican party, it might secure him millions of votes but not enough to win
the national popular vote and, current polls suggest, not the electoral
college.
A Trump
2024 election campaign depends on numerous variables: his age (he turns 75 next
month), the lure of the golf course, how Republicans fare in the 2022 midterm
elections, whether Republicans produce a viable alternative and how Biden’s
economy performs. But the grand jury could scuttle it before it begins.
In America,
anything is possible. Four or five years from now, Trump might be back in the
White House – or he might be in prison. Only the brave or foolhardy
would bet which.
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