Conservative News Daily

Georgia arraignment could backfire if Trump chooses strategic day to surrender.

Intrigue Surrounds Trump’s Indictment as Republican Debate Approaches

In one unusual way, former ‌President Donald Trump stands to benefit from his persecutors’ latest act​ of vengeance-inspired wrath.

On Monday, a grand jury ​in Fulton County, Georgia indictedTrump and 18 others on charges related ‍to⁣ the 2020 presidential election. The former president and his ​fellow ⁤defendants have until Aug. 25 to surrender.

Meanwhile, the first Republican presidential‍ debate looms on Aug. 23. Fox ‌News will broadcast the debate in Milwaukee.

It’s unlikely Trump will participate. He has said he won’t ⁤sign a required pledge ⁤to support whoever wins the GOP primary race, and he has little incentive to show up, given his big lead in the polls.

Tuesday on “CBS Mornings,” CBS ‌News ​senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe noted an opportunity for‌ Trump. The former president, O’Keefe suggested, could steal attention from his competitors by surrendering on Aug. 23.

“Where would you rather be that day,⁣ in Milwaukee with everybody else⁣ or in that Atlanta courtroom? He knows⁢ that this has completely sucked oxygen ‍away from everybody ⁢else​ running,” O’Keefe said, according to CBS⁤ News.

Trump’s Strategic Move

“So now he can potentially use this to his ‍advantage ⁢even⁢ more,” O’Keefe added.

The theory has merit,⁤ though not for the reason he implied.

If Trump chooses to surrender himself in Georgia on the day of the debate, he will do so not⁤ to distract attention from other Republican presidential candidates.​ After all, the latest RealClearPolitics average⁢ of polls shows the former president with a nearly 40-point⁣ lead over his closest challenger.

Instead, Trump has one good reason and one transcendent reason for surrendering ⁤himself on Aug. 23.

First, he has no⁢ cause to feel anything but contempt for executives at⁢ Fox News. If he can ⁣damage that moribund network by drawing viewers away from the Republican debate, he will.

Second —​ and far more important — he should appear in Georgia on Aug.​ 23 for posterity’s sake.

Our​ descendants, untainted by current passions, ⁢will marvel at the ‍juxtaposition.‌ One⁣ event, ‍by‍ its very name, exists to promote political debate. The other ⁤seeks ⁢to silence​ it.

Posterity ⁢should know that a criminal cartel indicted a former president for saying things ⁢with which cartel members ‍disagreed. ⁢Future Americans might not read the indictment — who among⁤ us ​even now⁤ can bring themselves to read these farcical documents in their entirety? — but they should see the contrast on Aug. 23.

Indeed, we do not think enough about history. This statement, of course, has ​broader applications, but I mean it specifically ‍with respect to this case.

No matter ‌the day Trump chooses to surrender himself, it⁣ will mark his fourth arraignment since March 30.

Surely no one can treat any of this as normal.

But they do. The presidential ‌debates continue as scheduled. O’Keefe offers his analysis on how a former president’s fourth indictment might​ affect a primary. It ‍seems surreal.

However‌ our ‍descendants ‍view these events, we may‍ rest assured that they will not see them through the lens ⁤of polls and political ‌strategy.

Instead, they ‍will see that something in ‍their ancestors’ world ⁤went very ⁤wrong.

The post ⁢ Georgia Arraignment Likely ‌to Backfire if Trump Picks Strategic Day to Turn Himself In appeared first on ‌ The Western Journal.



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