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As Trump’s NYC trial begins, Supreme Court justices’ warnings about political lawfare echo

President Trump sees the cases against him as a continuation of efforts by Democrats to discredit his 2016 election victory and hamper his presidency. In other words: political prosecutions.

 

President Donald Trump’s Manhattan trial began opening arguments and saw testimony from the prosecution’s first witness on Monday one week after several U.S. Supreme Court Justices appeared to raise concerns about the increasing prevalence of political prosecutions in the United States.

Specifically, two justices highlighted the apparent contradictions in the Biden administration’s selective enforcement of certain provisions against January 6 protestors. The high court’s ruling in this case may have implications for Trump too. He is charged with the same crime, obstructing an official proceeding in one of his federal cases.

The Justices’ concerns mirror President Trump’s own contentions that he is a victim of political persecution at the hands of his chief political rival, incumbent President Joe Biden, as well as the Manhattan District Attorney and New York Attorney General Letitia James, both Democrats.

The prosecution’s opening statement in the Manhattan trial Monday did little to assuage those concerns. Lead prosecutor Matthew Colangelo argued the case was much more than Trump’s alleged payments for a series of non-disclosure agreements, but a “conspiracy… to influence the [2016] presidential election.”

 
 

 

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