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Trump indictments: How to tell if they’re ‘political’

If former President Donald Trump has a core defense against the indictments accumulating against him, it is that prosecutors are after him not for what he has done, but for who he is. He’s the faraway front-runner for the GOP nomination, and he’s the candidate Democrats fear most.

There is no easy way to sever political concerns from legal ones in the Trump cases.

Why We Wrote This

Do recent indictments of Donald Trump reflect overdue legal accountability or unfair attacks by political rivals? The electorate is polarized, but some see ways to sift the difficult questions at play.

It is true that President Joe Biden appointed the attorney general who appointed special counsel Jack Smith. Many state and local prosecutors in the United States are elected, including those behind lawsuits filed in New York and expected in Georgia against Mr. Trump.

To maintain faith in the American legal system, prosecutors in the Trump cases must be extra-vigilant to try to prove their actions are driven by the law, not by politics, say some experts.

Beyond potential influence on the 2024 elections, “the bigger concerns have to do with people’s faith in and trust in political institutions,” says political scientist William Howell. In 2024, “the stakes are big, and they’re much bigger than Trump’s own political fate and legal fate,” he says.

If former President Donald Trump has a core defense against the indictments accumulating against him, it is that prosecutors are after him not for what he has done, but for who he is.

Mr. Trump and his allies have long argued that the federal and state charges he now faces are a coordinated political effort to derail his 2024 presidential campaign. It’s obvious, he says – he’s the faraway front-runner for the GOP nomination, and he’s the candidate Democrats fear most.

“When you look at what’s happening, this is a persecution of a political opponent. This was never supposed to happen in America,” Mr. Trump said last week after pleading not guilty to four counts of attempting to overturn the 2020 vote.

Why We Wrote This

Do recent indictments of Donald Trump reflect overdue legal accountability or unfair attacks by political rivals? The electorate is polarized, but some see ways to sift the difficult questions at play.

Prosecutors and Trump opponents dismiss that framing as an attempt by the former president to evade accountability for past actions. He chose to run for the Oval Office again, announcing early in an effort to establish a political shield, they say. Mr. Trump is arguing in essence that he is above the law, his opposition says.

But the bottom line, say some legal experts, is that there is no easy way to sever political concerns from legal ones in the Trump cases.

It is true that President Joe Biden appointed the attorney general who appointed special counsel Jack Smith. Many state and local prosecutors in the United States are elected, including the Democratic Manhattan district attorney suing Mr. Trump on charges related to paying hush money to a porn star, and the Democratic Atlanta-area district attorney reportedly set to indict Mr. Trump on election charges next week.

Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Attorney General Merrick Garland speaks in Washington on May 4, 2023, about verdicts for people involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

To maintain faith in the American legal system, prosecutors in the Trump cases must be extra-vigilant to try to prove their actions are driven by the law, not by politics, say some experts. The problem is that the nation faces a rocky road ahead as the Trump cases progress. Many voters in a polarized nation might judge not pursuing the former president as a political choice of sorts. Another large chunk might believe the opposite.

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