NEW YORK — Donald Trump is pushing the boundaries set for criminal defendants in the first days of his Manhattan hush money trial, at one point earning a rebuke from Judge Juan Merchan for purportedly trying to influence a prospective juror.
Continue reading “First Seven Jurors Selected Over Objections From Uncontained Trump”Tom Cotton Thinks Protesters May Need To Get ‘Their Skin Ripped Off’
Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) has been a fan of violence against protesters for some time. Interestingly, it’s only the demonstrators who have certain causes — like Black Lives Matter or Gaza, as opposed to, say, Stopping the Steal — that seem to catch the senator’s attention, and prompt genuinely diabolical proposals for how they might be retaliated against.
Continue reading “Tom Cotton Thinks Protesters May Need To Get ‘Their Skin Ripped Off’”The Dominating and The Dominated
Commentators have been going for months debating the merits of the New York/“hush money” prosecution of Donald Trump. Is it “serious”? Is it serious enough? How does it match up against the three other criminal prosecutions still looming over him? Does it lower the average level of seriousness when the independent seriousness of each is added together and divided by four? In the most general sense the entire conversation is an example of what we might call the Trump Reality Distortion Vortex. One of Trump’s great powers is that he is like a heavy magnet of distorted thinking. When he comes into proximity people start thinking stupid things, asking stupid questions. What opinion should we, who are not prosecutors, have toward a chronic lawbreaker who is charged with breaking the laws he broke? Will it make him stronger? Were the laws broken enough?
On the simplest level the first question has always seemed easy to me. People don’t just go to jail for crimes like this. One of Trump’s accomplices literally already went to jail for this specific crime. Indeed, he did so on charges brought by the Trump Justice Department. That speaks for itself.
Continue reading “The Dominating and The Dominated”Right-Wing Justices Haggle Over Law Used To Nab January 6 Rioters
The conservative Supreme Court justices shifted between a series of positions during Tuesday’s oral arguments, seemingly probing for a way to at least narrow an obstruction charge that the government has used against over 300 Jan. 6 rioters.
Continue reading “Right-Wing Justices Haggle Over Law Used To Nab January 6 Rioters”More Scenes From The First Criminal Trial Of A Former US President
This week we saw the first criminal trial against Donald Trump begin in earnest. The jury has been selected and the prosecution has called its first witnesses.
The former president is accused of crimes stemming from his hush money scheme in which he and his associates sought to keep Stormy Daniels quiet until after the 2016 election. This is the first criminal trial against a former U.S. President, and, unlike with Trump’s other, recent legal troubles, Trump will need to appear in court for much of this trial.
On Tuesday, Judge Juan Merchan held a contempt hearing to determine whether Trump should be sanctioned for allegedly disobeying the gag order on the case a number of times. This week also the beginning of testimony from David Percker, a former tabloid executive who orchestrated the “catch and kill” scheme, suppressing negative stories (such as Stormy Daniels’) for Trump ahead of the 2016 election.
Trump arrives at the Manhattan courthouse for day one of the trial

Protesters demonstrate outside of the courthouse

Trump arrives for day one

Trump scowls in the Manhattan courtroom

Trump critics gather outside of the courthouse

Trump arrives for day one

Trump arrives for day one

Trump enters the courthouse ahead of day one

Trump in the courthouse ahead of day one

Trump walks toward the courtroom

Trump and his lawyers ready for the first day of the trial

Trump and his legal team prepare for the start of jury selection

Trump in court

Trump in court

Trump returns to the courtroom after a break

Trump and his legal team

Trump in court

Trump in court

Trump exits the courtroom

Trump speaks to the press outside the courtroom

Trump arrives back at Trump Tower after the first day of the trial

Trump enters Trump Tower

Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg arrives for the second day of the trial

Trump departs Trump Tower to tatend day two of the trial

Trump arrives at the courthouse for the second day of the trial

Trump speaks to the press as he arrives for day two of the trial

Trump attends the second day of his criminal trial

Trump and his lawyer Todd Blanche

Trump sits in the courtroom on day two

Trump speaks to the media outside the courtroom

Alina Habba and Jason Miller appear in the courthouse

Alina Habba adresses the media

Trump sits in court

Trump looking low-energy for opening statements

Trump returns to the courtroom after a recess

Communications aide Natalie Harp appears outside the courtroom

Photographers gather in front of Trump

Trump and Blanche in the courtroom

Trump sits in court

A glassy-eyed Trump in the courtroom

Trump flips through a stack of papers before departing the courthouse

Send Me Your Local Story: Great Abortion Skedaddle of 2024
We talked about Rick Scott last night and Kari Lake before that. But there are clearly Republicans around the country realizing they’d just gotten off on the wrong foot with abortion. It turns out they can totally be good friends. 15 weeks? 24 weeks? Why not 80 weeks? Some of them are thinking real big. Anyway, I’m curious to hear about the stories that aren’t making national headlines. I know there are more. Can you send me yours from your neck of the woods? Same email address as always: talk (at) talkingpointsmemo dot com, as seen on Jeopardy ™.
Trump Faces A Mini-Trial For Contempt Within The Larger Hush-Money Trial
A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.
Come For Jury Selection, Stay For Contempt Proceedings
Before jury selection even began in the first-ever criminal trial of a former president, prosecutors sought to hold Donald Trump in contempt of court for violating the gag order imposed on him in the hush-money case.
On social media in the days before trial, Trump continued to attack witnesses in the case, including key witness Michael Cohen, Trump’s former fixer.
Prosecutors want Trump sanctioned $3,000 for the violation and warned that further violations could send him to jail for the duration of the trial.
The trial judge said he would enter a show cause order as to why Trump should not be held in contempt and set arguments on the matter for April 23. The contempt proceeding will happen in parallel with the trial.
The range of sanctions for contempt is pretty broad, and I would expect a graduated scale of increasing punishments for each violation, rather than hauling Trump off to jail right away. I know. But that’s how it typically works.
Our Man On The Scene
The logistics of being the sole trial reporter for a small news outlet like TPM are hairy. Josh Kovensky has been up at 5 a.m. ET that last two days and in line at the courthouse by 6 a.m. In each instance he got in, but only barely, due to limited seating while jury selection is underway.
As long as he gets in, we’ll be bringing you his coverage:
- Trump Becomes Just Another New York Criminal Defendant During First Day In Court
- Trump’s First Day Ends In Another Attempt To Get Out Of It
This Could Take A While
Between taking Wednesdays off, the upcoming Passover holiday, and other schedule constraints, April may be taken up by jury selection, and prosecutors may not begin their case in chief until May. It’s hard to predict, but that gives you some sense of the pacing of the trial.
A Quick Dip Into The Trivial
Did Trump fall asleep in court? So reported Maggie Haberman.
Did that make Trump mad at Maggie? You bet it did.
Does any of this matter? Not really.
But it was a good windup for Chris Hayes to knock a softball out of the park:
Cry Harder
The wailing from Donald Trump and his team after Day 1 of the trial mostly involved performative outrage that Donald Trump is being treated like a criminal defendant, which manifested itself in the form of extreme umbrage that Trump must be present in court.
The high dudgeon was reminiscent of every other white collar trial in the last few decades, when affluent (usually white) defendants first encounter the criminal justice system and are outraged, OUTRAGED, that people are treated like this. Yep, every damn day in every courthouse in America.
SCOTUS Takes Up Major Jan. 6 Case Today
Oral arguments are scheduled this morning before the Supreme Court in Fischer v. United States. The NYT’s Adam Liptak describes the stakes:
The question the justices will consider is whether a provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, enacted in the wake of the collapse of the energy giant Enron, covers the conduct of a former police officer, Joseph W. Fischer, who participated in the Capitol assault, on Jan. 6, 2021.
The law figures in two of the federal charges against Mr. Trump in his election subversion case, and more than 350 people who stormed the Capitol have been prosecuted under it. If the Supreme Court sides with Mr. Fischer and says the statute does not cover what he is accused of having done, Mr. Trump is almost certain to contend that it does not apply to his conduct, either.
Don’t Let Russian Election Interference Go Down The Memory Hole
David Corn tries to rescue us from the limits of memory and the onslaught of historical revisionism:
Russia attacked in 2016. It tried again in 2020. Isn’t it evident Putin—who is one for two—will take another stab at this in 2024? Especially now that much more is at stake. This election will likely determine whether the United States continues supporting Ukraine’s fight against Russia’s brutal and illegal invasion. With Trump and other Republicans opposing such assistance, how could Putin not try once more to give him a secret boost?
Worth your time.
Now Every Losing GOP Candidate Blames ‘Election Fraud’
TPM’s Khaya Himmelman on the metastasis of wild, conspiracy-fueled “election fraud” claims being raised by losing GOP candidates all the way down to dogcatcher. Okay, maybe not dogcatcher. Yet.
Quote Of The Day
“I’m fairly concerned and it’s definitely a gut check moment for people who have been pro-life for a very long time.”
Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, on elected Republicans freaking out over the political landscape in a post-Dobbs world.
2024 Ephemera
- FL-Sen: Sen. Rick Scott (R), without a hint of irony, tells voters to forget about his support last year for a six-week abortion ban because now he’s completely onboard with a 15-week ban.
- Abortion will be on the ballot in about a dozen states in November.
- President Biden kicks off three days of campaign events in Pennsylvania.
The Latest In Lecterngate!
AP:
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders ‘ office potentially violated state laws on purchasing, state property and government records when it purchased a $19,000 lectern for the Republican governor that’s prompted nationwide attention, an audit requested by lawmakers said Monday.
Legislative auditors referred the findings in the long-awaited audit of the lectern to local prosecutors and the attorney general, and lawmakers planned to hold a hearing Tuesday on the report. The report cited several potential legal violations, including paying for the lectern before it was delivered and the handling of records regarding the purchase.
Potential Movement On The Hill For Ukraine Aid
It seems like a long shot and it might cost Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA) his speakership, but he finally plans to bring Ukraine aid to a vote as early as the end of this week.
His tactic, such as it is, consists of bringing aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan up in three separate bills along with a fourth bill full of Republican goodies. Then the whole thing will in theory be sent to the Senate as one bill for it to pass.
The idea seems to be that the bill full of goodies will placate the hard right in his conference, which is opposed to Ukraine aid and threatening to remove him as speaker if he pushes it through. But it’s already showing signs of not placating them.
‘What’s Wrong With Me? Why Can’t I Feel?’
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The Great Abortion Skedaddle of 2024 Continues
Just a few days after Kari Lake of Arizona went from supporting an absolute ban on abortion to holding a series of teach-ins on the work of Andrea Dworkin (I kid, but only barely) we have Rick Scott announcing his own epic flipflop as Republicans across the country run away from their records as hardcore abortion restrictionists.
Continue reading “The Great Abortion Skedaddle of 2024 Continues”Rick Scott Makes It Pretty Obvious Republicans Are Anxious About Florida, Too
Just two weeks after the Florida Supreme Court upheld a 15-week abortion ban and cleared the way for a six-week one to take effect, Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) is publicly attempting to soften his stance on abortion.
Continue reading “Rick Scott Makes It Pretty Obvious Republicans Are Anxious About Florida, Too”Trump’s First Day Ends In Another Attempt To Get Out Of It
NEW YORK — After the morning arguments, we landed at what will likely be the meat of the coming days and, possibly, weeks: jury selection.
Continue reading “Trump’s First Day Ends In Another Attempt To Get Out Of It”