Will Trump’s impeachment trial have little effect on voters? What does this mean for Trump?
The circulated memo from the Trump campaign suggested that Trump’s trial would have minimal impact on voters, based on internal surveys. The memo highlighted that many Americans viewed the trial as a political sham, with Republicans and independents doubting the prosecution’s case. This raises questions about the trial’s effects on Trump’s election prospects. The accuracy of these surveys conducted by Fabrizio remains uncertain.
Shortly before the verdict of former President Donald Trump’s hush money case was announced on Thursday, a memo circulated by the Trump campaign suggested that Trump’s trial would only have a minimal impact on who voters support in November.
“According to the appended memo based on our internal surveys conducted by Tony Fabrizio, well over 50% of Americans have consistently stated the trial is a political sham,” the memo read. “A vast majority of Republicans and independents believe that the prosecution has failed to make their case that Donald Trump did anything wrong. They see the corrupt Judge and the Biden show trials for what they are.”
“The bottom line is this case doesn’t have an impact on voters,” it noted.
The accuracy of these surveys conducted by Fabrizio remains to be seen. However, it raises the question of whether the trial “doesn’t have an impact on voters.” Is that a good thing or a bad thing for Trump’s presidential election chances?
Many people seem to agree that Trump’s hush money trial was politically motivated and, as Trump has repeatedly said, a sham. This was reinforced earlier this week during (past-his-prime and overrated) actor Robert De Niro’s performative antics during a press conference in New York. The aging actor showed up with two former police officers from the Jan. 6 riot in Washington, D.C. — an incident that, however one feels about it, had absolutely nothing to do with Trump’s alleged hush money payments to Stormy Daniels.
But what does this all mean for Trump’s support?
For those happy with the verdict against Trump, one can safely assume such people will not be voting for him in November and probably never were. However, for the people who thought the trial was a sham and were angered by the verdict, would that mean that it could benefit Trump during the election? Logic would seem to suggest it could. But if Fabrizio’s surveys are indeed correct, then that could actually be a troubling sign for Trump’s reelection chances.
It could also be that the person conducting this survey underestimated the backlash from the verdict and didn’t take it into consideration when trying to advance the narrative that the trial was irrelevant to perceived voter support for the election.
It’s impossible to gauge whether more people were happy with the verdict or were outraged at the gross miscarriage of justice from even having such a trial. It should matter, and it should make people realize how dangerous the Left is in the country. However, many of the people who have claimed they support such American principles have also tried to sabotage Trump — both as president and candidate. In reality, it’s hard to say one way or the other what influence Trump’s trial and subsequent verdict will have on the election.
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If we lived in a normal, rational world, voters would acknowledge that what happened to Trump was unfair, unjust, and antithetical to what the country is supposed to represent and the danger that Biden and the Democrats represent and, as a result, vote Trump.
At this point, there are only two choices in November. You are either voting for the candidate whose administration more resembles Josef Stalin’s Soviet Union than the United States of America or Trump.
There is no in-between.
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