OPINION
MAUREEN
DOWD
Holy Cow, 34 for 45!
June 1,
2024
Donald Trump stands in the lobby of Trump Tower facing
reporters and away from the camera.
Maureen
Dowd
By Maureen
Dowd
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/01/opinion/donald-trump-trial.html
Opinion
Columnist
WASHINGTON
— At Nativity grade school, we grew up steeped in the lore — and gore — of
martyrs. For their brave deeds and words, these men and women were stoned,
crucified, beheaded, stripped of all their skin, shot with arrows and cooked
alive on a red-hot griddle.
So I’m a
little surprised my siblings would somehow put Donald Trump in those martyrs’
sainted company.
My sister
and brother, disturbed by Trump’s constant chaos and slashing insults, saw
their hopes for Ron DeSantis or Nikki Haley evaporate.
I called my
Republican sibs Friday to see if hearing the word “guilty” ring out 34 times in
a New York courtroom had finally severed them from Trump; they are, after all,
children of a police detective.
My sister,
Peggy, said she couldn’t sleep all night.
“You
decided you can’t vote for a felon?” I asked.
“I wasn’t
going to vote for Trump,” she said. “But now I am because I thought this whole
thing was a sham.”
She tried
to donate $100 to the Trump campaign, but so many people were contributing, she
said, the site crashed. The campaign said it raised $52.8 million in the first
24 hours after the verdict on the Republican fund-raising platform.
Peggy
thinks Alvin Bragg, who boasted when he ran for D.A. that he had sued Trump 100
times while a federal prosecutor, conjured the crime by inflating the charges
from a misdemeanor to 34 felonies because he was determined to bring down
Trump. She’s furious the jury believed “that lying, stealing ass, Michael
Cohen.” Like the CNN legal analyst Elie Honig, she questioned the judge’s small
donation to a pro-Biden, anti-Trump political operation. How would Democrats
feel if it had been a MAGA donation? And she feels sorry for Barron Trump, the
former president’s 18-year-old son.
“I couldn’t
get to sleep,” she said. “I was dreaming that I was in jail after a sham court
trial. I was thinking that if they arrest me, I’d be out of luck. My father’s
dead and two of my brothers are dead. Who else would save me?”
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Holy Kafka!
Trump’s line about how he’s being martyred for us always seemed risible to me,
but I guess it works with some people, even some people close to me.
My sister
is not MAGA; she voted for J.F.K. in 1960, Jimmy Carter in 1976, Barack Obama
in 2008 and wrote in Joe Biden’s name in 2012. But she thinks President Biden
has declined significantly and should step aside for a fresh choice. She’s
upset about paying over $100 for 10 items at the grocery store. And she is
irked by the Democratic fervor to throw Trump in the clink.
“They want
to put him in jail three days before our convention?” she asked. “The man is
surrounded by Secret Service. What will they do? Put him in a cell with four
Secret Service guys around him?”
She thinks
that Alexander Soros and other Democrats who want Biden to call Trump “a
convicted felon” over and over should be careful, given that Hunter Biden is
going on trial in Wilmington, Del., on gun-related felony charges, including
one that, as Trump’s lackeys have said about his own charge, is a paperwork
violation.
My brother,
Kevin, said the moral of the story for Democrats is: “Be careful what you wish
for.”
“This
reminds me of Republicans celebrating when they impeached Bill Clinton,” he
said of Democratic glee over Trump’s conviction, predicting that the “farce,”
as he called it, would give Trump a bump, as the G.O.P.’s pursuit of Clinton
did for him.
“The 12
jurors didn’t even have the decency to stay out long enough to show they had
really considered it,” Kevin said. “You want to talk about election
interference, take a look at this.”
Unlike my
siblings, I found the guilty verdicts bracing. A dozen Americans had finally
sliced through Trump’s reality distortion field and said, simply, “You’re lying
and cheating and it’s not right.” Even though the case was a stretch and not
the strongest one against Trump, there was something refreshing about the jury
doing what no one else around Trump has been able to do — not the inexplicably
sycophantish Republican lawmakers, not the corrupt Supreme Court, not the
slowpoke Merrick Garland.
The jurors
were not Trump’s peers because Trump has no peer in mendacity. But it was great
to see the 12 just say no, you don’t slime your way into the presidency by
having your creepy gofer pay off a porn star you slept with while your wife was
home with a newborn and call it a legal expense.
As Chris
Christie told David Axelrod on the “Hacks on Tap” podcast, it may be more
instructive to watch how the verdict affects Trump than how the verdict affects
voters.
Even though
Trump has been styling himself as Al Capone — who also got brought down over
bookkeeping sleaze — he seemed rattled by the verdict. A lifetime of slipping
away from accountability made him think he was invulnerable. When Trump took
the stage near his gilded escalator Friday morning — this time without Melania,
who stayed far away from the Stormy trial — he kicked off his revenge tour with
a scream of consciousness, pulling out all his old tricks.
He summoned
his favorite boogeyman, immigrants with darker skin, saying “millions and
millions of people are flowing in from all parts of the world, not just South
America — from Africa, from Asia, from the Middle East, and they’re coming in
from jail and prisons and they’re coming in from mental institutions and insane
asylums.” He said young men are pouring over the border, including terrorists,
“from places unknown, from languages that we … haven’t even heard of.” He
added, “It’s not like Spanish or French or Russian.”
Migrants,
he said, “are taking over our luxury hotels” and yet “our great veterans are
living on the streets.”
For Trump,
the “thugs” were not the ones who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6; the “thugs”
were the lawmakers who investigated the attack on Jan. 6.
The master
of Mar-a-Lago played the victim, saying the prosecutors were trying to destroy
his life over “a legal expense.” Striking the martyr note, he said witnesses on
his side were “literally crucified.”
Anyone who
isn’t a lickspittle must be cruelly belittled. Justice Juan Merchan is a
“crooked judge” who “looks like an angel but he’s really a devil.”
It’s
remarkable to watch the luminaries of “law and order” contort themselves to
undermine Trump’s conviction, dues for what Cohen called a “dumpster cult.” The
party of law and order evidently doesn’t like any law it didn’t order.
His
puckered-up vice-presidential wannabe J.D. Vance evaded Wolf Blitzer’s best
efforts to have him disavow Trump’s claim that we live in a “fascist state,”
instead lamenting the effort to prosecute Trump for “a paperwork violation.”
Speaker Mike Johnson called for the Supreme Court — “I know many of them
personally” — to jump in and reverse the verdict.
Trump,
meanwhile, projected as always, deflecting criticisms leveled at him and
boomeranging them onto Biden. Trump once more painted Biden, 81, as faltering
and senile, ignoring the fact that he himself, about to turn 78 this month, has
lost a few steps. The suzerain of dishonesty called Biden “the most dishonest
president we’ve ever had.” Trump said we have a president and “a group of
fascists” that are “destroying our country.”
If Trump
keeps railing about himself in apocalyptic terms, it could give Biden an
opportunity. And Biden badly needs an opportunity.
More on
Donald Trump’s criminal trial
Maureen
Dowd is an Opinion columnist for The Times. She won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for
distinguished commentary. @MaureenDowd • Facebook
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