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Notes -
Mundane Scheduling Details - Trump Edition
For a while now, I've been wondering about very boring dates on calendars. Last summer, I wondered:
No charges have appeared yet on the classified docs thing, and from this game plan, we're already sort of running late on the NY business records indictment. Most importantly, we have a calendar update! From Lawfare's account of the arraignment:
This definitely adds some real data to my estimates and gives something interesting to watch and consider. Even if they start next January as the gov't wants, the trial itself will take a little time. So, I think I was close with saying it would take about a year; this seems to indicate that it would be about ten months from indictment to verdict, minimum.
The Iowa caucuses are scheduled for January 22, 2024. NY may be thinking that if they push hard on the calendar, they can get a conviction in before this date, but with bringing the charges as late as they did, this may be a tough haul. At this point, I'm not confident I can predict either side's calendar strategy. For the rest of this, I'll mostly be assuming that Trump is not able to get the charges dismissed or removed to a federal venue via pre-trial motions; obviously, succeeding on either of those fronts would change everything. Does Trump want to push it further out, hoping that he can win a primary or two before the trial is supposed to start, adding pressure to not convict him on something ticky tack? At this point, if he is convicted, there's zero chance that he'll be able to fit a meaningful appeal in before the primaries, so probably a key question is his probability estimate of how likely it is that the NY court will convict him (whether or not he thinks it's bullshit or would be overturned on appeal); if he thinks it's above some threshold, he probably wants to delay and get a primary or two in first. If he thinks it's below some threshold, he could play a very risky strategy and hope for a huge "TRUMP EXONERATED" headline just before the primaries.
On the NY side, how much do they actually care about getting the official 'conviction' in before Iowa? Maybe they're perfectly happy with letting the trial date slip, so long as the case isn't dismissed; they can go into the primaries messaging, "Trump is an indicted criminal awaiting trial; you wouldn't want to vote for a criminal, would you?"
Either way, the potential schedule is in one sense unsurprising and in another sense suddenly sort of extremely real and threatening by how close it is to the electoral process. This may be how we're going to run this country, and I guess the writers of The Epic Tale of Trump and the US Political System have plenty of room for at least one more season that introduces another New Season Dominant Character and plenty of potential for extremely high drama individual episodes.
Underlying this well-thought out post seems to be the assumption that if Democrats get Trump out of the way, that advantages them in the 2024 election. Is this the case? I know that there's a strong base of Trump supporters, even on the more intellectually inclined end of rightist twitter. I see a lot of people decrying DeSantis for being a traitor, snake in the reeds or whatever.
But DeSantis has demonstrated some ability to play the game, to impose costs on Disney and so on. He's 44, Trump is 76, turning 77 in June. If you're looking for revolutionary action or some kind of significant change, does anyone expect that from a 77 year old? Most importantly, DeSantis is still an unknown, he hasn't had an opportunity like Trump had in 2016 (total dominance of the executive and legislative branches) and squandered it. Why does anyone think that Trump will do more for his cause in a 2024-8 term than in 2016-2020? He bombed Syria half-heartedly, he failed to pull troops out of the Middle East, there was an ineffectual trade war with China (Biden seems to have put more pressure on than Trump did), tax cuts at home, literally zero pushback on culture issues, an ineffectual border wall...
In contrast, DeSantis is smart and seems pretty capable, energetic and motivated. Proper military service, medals, A+ rating from the NRA (in contrast to Trump's lacklustre gun control record), a '0' from the 'Human Rights Campaign for his voting record on LGBT-related issues', good results on COVID deaths and economic growth during COVID, enacted bills against cultural marxism and trans in women's sports, happily married with three children. What more could anyone ask for? I guess he's not as rich as Trump, so he'll be more beholden to donors? This ignores all the money Trump was taking from dubious figures like Adelson.
My interpretation of the rightist point of view is that if the Democrats want to get rid of Trump, good! There's a certain chilling effect for Republicans - but also a motivation effect. If DeSantis or whoever else doesn't act fast, they cannot assume that they'll be safe when they leave office. People in the past have critiqued me for seeing other people's points of view as though they were my own, reminding me that others have my own perspective. I still don't understand why people would support Trump over DeSantis, given the choice. I know the polling but I can't understand why this should be. Is it just that people don't like DeSantis because he's not as unscripted and direct as Trump?
That's extremely short-sighted though. Whatever benefit is gained by not having Trump on the ticket does not outweigh the establishment of the precedent that Liberal justice departments get to have a veto on Republican national candidate.
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