Conventional political wisdom suggests the first criminal trial of Donald Trump, which got underway in Manhattan last week, will have a minimal effect on the 2024 election. Many political observers see the allegations — covering up hush money payments ahead of the 2016 election — as relatively trifling, and certainly not comparable to the other three indictments Trump faces in Florida, Georgia and Washington, D.C. Even a guilty verdict in the trial would “be unlikely to have a big influence come November,” declared an analyst for ABC News.
Perhaps that’s true. But in the meantime, the contrast between Biden and Trump could not be more stark — and that will have enduring, potentially decisive political influence.
Make no mistake, this is a serious political problem for Trump — and one that’s only going to get worse.
This week, Joe Biden was in Pennsylvania campaigning for re-election. He called for new tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum from China before a union crowd in Pittsburgh. And in his hometown of Scranton, he attacked Trump for supporting tax policies that favor the wealthy. Meanwhile, Trump was stuck in a Manhattan courtroom, as jurors were selected for his trial.
Make no mistake, this is a serious political problem for Trump — and one that’s only going to get worse. Opening statements in the trial begin on Monday. As things stand, Trump will likely spend much of May in court. While Biden will be out on the campaign trail, meeting with and talking to voters about why he deserves another term in office, Trump will be in Manhattan trying to convince 12 jurors not to find him guilty of falsifying business records in order to hide a hush money payment to a former porn star.
Every day spent in court is a day that Trump can’t be out on the hustings talking to supporters or raising money for a fall campaign in which he already trails Biden badly in fundraising. Candidate appearances usually give a modest boost to a presidential campaign. Losing that opportunity for more than a month cannot be a positive development.
Merely from an image-making standpoint, what’s better: a candidate sitting at a defense table several hours a day or a candidate shaking hands with his supporters?
For Trump’s MAGA base, the New York City trial will likely only increase their support for the former president. For them, any attempt to hold Trump accountable for his actions is “election interference” and a plot by Democrats to ensure Biden’s re-election.
And what if Trump is found guilty? Then, things will only get worse.
But what about the rest of the country? It’s easy to imagine that images of Trump in a courtroom will remind Americans of the never-ending drama that defined his four years in office — and not in a good way.








