The 2024 election can at times feel like it’s taking place on two entirely different planes of existence. These separate realities generally run parallel, never intersecting and only occasional acknowledging each other. But on Tuesday, the two came close enough to offer a view through the looking glass in a way that would disorient anyone who whipped between them.
In Manhattan, it was the 13th day of the first criminal trial of a former president. Donald Trump stands accused of falsifying business records to hide his payments to adult film actor Stormy Daniels. She claims that she’d had an affair with Trump; he has denied it but wanted to keep the claim under wraps as the 2016 presidential election approached for fear it could deal a lethal blow to his campaign. He sat at the defense table with his lawyers as the woman at the center of the case was sworn in as a witness for the prosecution.
The 2024 election can at times feel like it’s taking place on two entirely different planes of existence.
Smash cut to Washington, where President Joe Biden was arriving at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. The museum annually hosts events to mark the Days of Remembrance, when the memories of the victims of the Nazi’s extermination campaign are brought forward again. Biden was preparing to deliver a major address about antisemitism, as one would expect of a sitting U.S. president — an almost jarring bit of normality during such an abnormal time.
Jump back to New York and Daniels shared with a rapt courtroom details of her time together with Trump. Jurors took notes as she described how Trump first approached her through an aide, inviting her to dinner. She testified that she initially turned him down, but her publicist encouraged her to attend. “It’ll make a great story. He’s a business guy. What could possibly go wrong?” she recalled to silence from the jury and laughter from the court’s overflow room.
Two hundred miles away, Biden was condemning a “ferocious surge in antisemitism in America and around the world” that has escalated since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks, which left over 1,000 Israelis dead. “To the Jewish community, I want you to know: I see your fear, your hurt, your pain,” Biden said. “Let me reassure you, as your president, you’re not alone. You belong. You always have and you always will.” The solemn address befit the gravity of the history on display around him and the weight of the crimes carried out against American Jews to this day.








