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May 9th, 2024

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Televising Trump's trial will be the Super Bowl of politics

Joe Battenfeld

By Joe Battenfeld

Published August 22, 2023

Televising Trump's trial will be the Super Bowl of politics

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Democrats and Georgia prosecutors will try to humiliate Donald Trump in a televised courtroom appearance and trial, but the tactic could backfire if the former president succeeds in putting the politically-tainted judicial system on trial.

Trump's first appearance in court to face his charges, which will come sometime before Aug. 25, could be the Super Bowl of politics, drawing hundreds of millions of viewers around the world.

It will be the first time live cameras have been permitted in Trump's long legal saga.

Prosecutors and the judge want the optic of treating Trump like any other criminal, complete with mug shots and showing up at the jailhouse.

There are obvious disadvantages to Trump fighting his case live on TV.

Every minute he has to spend in court is a minute he can't be out there campaigning.

Every dollar he spends defending himself, will be money he can't spend on the campaign.

Whether they stop him running for president they've already tried tying his hands behind his back and bogging down his candidacy.

But Trump — never one to shy away from cameras — could try to make the courtroom his stage in proving the charges against him are bogus and an attempt to stop his 2024 presidential campaign.

No matter what prosecutors do, it's going to seem political, especially when the lawyers and judge are Democrats.

As much as Democrats in a twisted way will enjoy seeing him humiliated, most of the country may see it differently.

It could take on a Kangaroo court feel and the people with the credibility problem could turn out to be prosecutors.

Much like Trump's poll numbers have gone up after his indictments, a trial — if it even comes before the election — could boost his chances.

The Georgia case could turn out to be one indictment too far, putting a face to the notion that this is simply a stop Trump effort.

Trump could act indignant, taking the Al Pacino, "I'm not out of order, you're out of order, this whole court is out of order" approach. He could become a martyr to his supporters.

The kitchen sink indictment against the former president for trying to overturn the Georgia election may not withstand scrutiny once Trump is allowed to present his defense.

It could show how ludicrous it is trying Trump like an organized crime kingpin with RICO charges. Did he try to corral enough votes to win the state? Yes. But he can argue that he didn't rig the election because he didn't win.

There will be an initial wow factor when Trump first appears in court, but as they slog through other appearances and the trial it could quickly become mundane — much like the Jan. 6 hearings.

The reality is most courtroom proceedings are slow-moving and boring — even with Trump at the center.

But if Trump plays his cards right, he could walk away as a political martyr — not the crooked mobster prosecutors are trying to portray.

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Joe Battenfeld
Boston Herald/(TNS)

Joe Battenfeld is a veteran Boston Herald political columnist and multimedia reporter.


Previously:
06/22/23 Dems have a BIG 2024 problem, and it ain't not just Slow Joe
04/31/23 Dem Party pols squelch dissent and opponents
04/24/23 Tucker, Don Lemon ousters could be sign networks realigning for 2024
04/24/23 CNN's 'Fact Checker' Is Stuck on Correcting Trump
03/23/23 Trumped-up charges are Republican red meat
03/23/23 Wellesley College in uncomfortable national spotlight over exclusionary gender policy
03/13/23 RFK Jr. teases presidential run in what could be final humiliation for family
03/06/23 Ouster of lib mayor in Chicago could be warning
03/02/23 Origins of COVID the latest 'conspiracy theory' proved right
02/23/23 Biden ignores the 'Deplorables' in East Palestine at his own risk
01/19/23 NCAA finally to confront fake female athletes
12/22/22 Jan. 6 committee obsesses after Donald Trump while ignoring a real threat
12/15/22 Millions of disgruntled voters fleeing the voter rolls
12/15/22 Dems issue ultimatum to New Hampshire on first in the nation primary
12/09/22 Once powerful CNN continues to implode
11/17/22 Trump's possible path to the Republican nomination in 2024
08/25/22 Fauci getting out just in time
08/24/22 Can anti-Trump CNN shed its lib bias and win back viewers?
08/08/22 Narcissist Nancy and her dangerous ego game
08/04/22 Lawmakers putting the 'high' in high school
07/13/22 The question is no longer will Biden run for another term, it's whether he can even complete his first term

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