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However, economist Paul Krugman argues inflation created lasting psychological and political damage. Instead, inflation, which now sits around 3.2% as of July, has had lasting psychological and political damage, Krugman argues. But with a strong labor market and unemployment levels remaining at around 3.8%, there's little argument that the economy is undergoing what Krugman calls "remarkable progress." According to the personal consumption expenditure deflator, the Fed's preferred inflation indicator, inflation fell below 3% for the last three months, well below last year's rate. The drastically high levels of unemployment many economists predicted two years ago are nowhere to be seen, as unemployment levels matched pre-Covid levels within three years — in comparison to over a decade following the 2008 recession.
Persons: Paul Krugman, Krugman, Goldman Sachs, there's, Biden, It's, Joe Biden's Organizations: Service, The New York Times, Quinnipiac University, Democrats, Trump, US, Biden Locations: Wall, Silicon, Russian, Ukraine
I'm living proof you don't need a certain college major to do alright in life. The question of whether your college major matters (if you even have one) is similar to the question of whether having a degree at all matters in that the answer is yes and no. When your major really mattersThere are certainly jobs that require specific degrees. But there are also plenty of jobs that don't require specific degrees. If you're like I was and wondering if your major is going to pay off in the long run, fear not.
Persons: — I've, gainfully, I've, didn't, Mark Zuckerberg, Oprah Winfrey, John Legend, Mayim Bialik, she'd, Kouakou, Christine Cruzvergara, Gen, they're, Cruzvergara Organizations: Sarah Lawrence College, University of Pennsylvania, University of California, Quinnipiac University, CNBC Locations: Los Angeles
Chris Christie to understand what happens when a Republican candidate is highly critical of the former president. His net favorability rating in the latest Quinnipiac University poll stands at minus-44 points among Republicans. Those with an opinion viewed him unfavorably by more than a 3-to-1 ratio (26% unfavorable to 8% favorable, a net favorability rating of minus-18 points). Among those who have, Hurd has a similar net favorability ratio to Hutchinson’s – 4% viewed him favorably and 11% unfavorably. This leaves Trump’s GOP rivals with a conundrum that even Harry Houdini would find difficult to solve: how to eat away at Trump’s support without being seen as trying to bring him down.
Persons: Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Chris Christie, Christie, Joe Biden, Christie’s, Asa Hutchinson –, hadn’t, Hutchinson, Will Hurd, didn’t, haven’t, Hurd, Trump, Carolina Sen, Tim Scott, He’s, Scott, Vivek Ramaswamy, Ramaswamy, Harry Houdini Organizations: CNN, Florida Gov, GOP, Trump, New, New Jersey Gov, Republican, Quinnipiac University, Republicans, New York Times, Siena, Trump . Former Arkansas Gov, Trump –, Former Texas Rep, Trump ., CBS, Quinnipiac Locations: New Jersey, Milwaukee, Quinnipiac, Carolina, Iowa, Ohio
The question alarming many Trump-skeptical Republicans this week is whether Americans would ever send a convict to the White House. Sununu dismissed national polls that show Trump’s support among Republicans well over 50% and said to look at polling in early contest states. A new poll in Iowa by the Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom suggests Trump has the support of 42% of likely Republican caucusgoers. Opposing views of Trump’s supportCNN’s Harry Enten looked at that Iowa poll and argues that much of Trump’s support is committed. Two-thirds of the likely caucusgoers who say they will support Trump also say their mind is made up.
Persons: Trump, J, Michael Luttig, Joe Biden, , Sen, Bill Cassidy, Cassidy, couldn’t, Scott Jennings, Jennings, Luttig, Tucker Carlson, It’s, Chris Sununu, , ” Sununu, Joe Biden’s, Trump’s, bilking, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Sununu, That’s, caucusgoers, Ron DeSantis, South Carolina Sen, Tim Scott, Harry Enten, What’s, Donald Trump can’t, , ” Enten, Biden, “ Donald Trump Organizations: CNN, Trump, New, Louisiana Republican, Republicans, Republican, White, Quinnipiac University, GOP, , Fox News, New Hampshire Gov, The New York Times, statehouse, Sunday, Democratic Party, Des Moines Register, NBC, caucusgoers ., caucusgoers . Florida Gov, South Locations: Atlanta, Milwaukee, New York, Florida, Iowa, New Hampshire, Washington ,, Georgia, Louisiana, “ State, America, “ Both Iowa, caucusgoers . Florida, South Carolina, caucusgoers
The problem is Republican voters have been consistent in what they think about the different Trump indictments. Between 14% and 16% of Republicans believe Trump should have been charged, according to recent ABC News/Ipsos surveys. Trump is running neck and neck with Biden in general election surveys. Moreover, Trump is polling no worse against Biden nationally than his Republican rivals. More voters who disliked both Trump and Clinton went with Trump, and it won him the election.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Joe Biden, they’re, Biden, Ron DeSantis, can’t, hasn’t, I’m, he’s, Democrat Hillary Clinton, Clinton Organizations: CNN, ABC News, Republican, Trump, Republicans, Fox News, ABC, Department of Justice, Florida Gov, Quinnipiac University, Biden, AP, Democrat Locations: Milwaukee, Fulton County, Georgia
More than half of U.S. adults, 54%, said they think Trump should face criminal charges in that case, while 42% disagreed, according to the university's latest national survey, released Wednesday. The governor, who was just six points behind Trump in Quinnipiac's national poll in February, trailed the former president by 39 points in the survey released Wednesday. Quinnipiac surveyed 1,818 American adults between Aug. 10-14 in its latest poll, which had a margin of error of 2.3 percentage points. The polling period ended on the same day that Trump was hit with his fourth criminal indictment, this one related to his alleged scheme to reverse his loss in Georgia's 2020 election. Sixty-eight percent of respondents in Quinnipiac's poll said that if a person is convicted of a felony, they should not be eligible to run for president.
Persons: Donald Trump, Ronald Reagan, Barrett Prettyman, Jack Smith, Trump, Tim Malloy, Ron DeSantis, Joe Biden's, Organizations: Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Barrett Prettyman United States Court, Quinnipiac University, Independents, Republican, Florida Gov, Trump, Quinnipiac Locations: Ronald Reagan Washington, Arlington , Va, U.S, Quinnipiac's, Georgia
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis on Wednesday proposed a March 4 trial date for her case accusing former President Donald Trump and others of trying to overturn Georgia's 2020 election results. In his other active criminal cases, Trump's attorneys have advocated for delaying the trials until after the 2024 presidential election. Trump's criminal trial in New York, on charges of falsifying business records related to hush money payments, is set for March 25. A federal judge in Florida, meanwhile, set a May 20 trial date in special counsel Jack Smith's case accusing Trump of mishandling classified records. In a separate federal case charging Trump with election-related crimes, Smith's office has proposed a Jan. 2 trial start.
Persons: Fani Willis, Donald Trump, Georgia's, Willis, Trump, Jack Smith's, Donald John Trump's, , Ron DeSantis Organizations: Fulton County Superior Court, Republican, Trump, Republicans, GOP, Florida Gov Locations: Fulton County, Atlanta, Georgia, New York, Florida, State, Iowa, New Jersey, Quinnipiac
The chance of Trump winning another term is very real
  + stars: | 2023-07-30 | by ( Harry Enten | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
Similarly, Clinton’s edge was in the single digits over Obama in South Carolina at this stage of the campaign. Of course, winning the primary is one thing for Trump, who has led in almost every single Republican primary poll published in the past eight years. A poll out last week from Marquette University Law School had Biden and Trump tied percentage-wise (with a statistically insignificant few more respondents choosing Trump). The good news for Democrats is that general election polling, unlike primary polling, is not predictive at this point. But for now, the chance that Trump is president in less than two years time is a very real possibility.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Democrat Al Gore, Republican George W, Bush, Hillary Clinton, Gore, Clinton, Ron DeSantis, George McGovern, Jimmy Carter, Barack Obama, Obama, Republican John McCain, John Edwards, Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney, Romney couldn’t, McCain, Joe Biden, Biden Organizations: CNN, Republican, Democrat, Florida Gov, Trump, Marquette University Law School, Biden, ABC News, Washington Post, Quinnipiac University, Democrats Locations: Bush, Trump’s, Iowa , New Hampshire, South Carolina, Clinton, Iowa, New Hampshire, Marquette, Pennsylvania, Erie, Quinnipiac
The West Virginia Democrat’s model has served him well with repeated statewide wins in one of the most conservative pro-Trump states in the nation. For now, Manchin’s noncommittal answers are worrying some of his Democratic colleagues. Polls show that both Biden and Trump, the front-runner for the GOP nomination, are unpopular. It argues, therefore, that 79 electoral votes are potentially at risk for Biden from the involvement of a third-party challenger. Such a challenger would also need to win states where Biden won big, and at least some conservative bastions.
Persons: West Virginia Sen, Joe Manchin, Donald Trump, Manchin, who’s, Joe Biden, roil Biden’s, CNN’s Manu Raju, , “ I’ve, Biden, Manchin’s, Arizona Sen, Mark Kelly, ” Kelly, “ I’m, West, Vermont Sen, Bernie Sanders, Biden –, Georgia –, CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Trump, , Robert Kennedy Jr, , Kennedy, Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, Jake Tapper, , Jon Huntsman, Ryan Clancy, CNN’s Michael Smerconish, we’ve, Jill Stein, Ralph Nader, Gary Johnson –, Nader, Stein, siphoning, Al Gore, Hillary Clinton, CNN’s Harry Enten, don’t, Chris Christie, Trump’s, ” Christie Organizations: CNN, West, Democratic, West Virginia Democrat’s, Trump, Senate, Manchin, Harvard, Green, GOP, Biden, Florida Gov, Democratic National Committee, Republican Gov, Saint Anselm College in, Republican, Democrats, Green Party, Libertarian Party, Trump Republicans, Quinnipiac University, Former New Jersey Gov, ABC Locations: West Virginia, New Hampshire, Granite, Arizona, “ State, Vermont, Georgia, Covid, South Carolina, Florida, Saint Anselm College in Manchester, United States, Washington, Former
Why Biden worries about a third-party rival in 2024
  + stars: | 2023-07-16 | by ( Harry Enten | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
This would normally be the part of the story where I’d tell you that a third-party candidate has little chance of winning next year – and I am telling you that. It’s also true, however, that 2024 is shaping up to be the kind of election Biden could lose primarily because of a third-party candidacy. This year it’s pretty clear that such a portion of third-party voters probably already exists for a simple reason: Biden and Trump are historically unpopular. The headlines and the fears Democrats have about a third-party candidate are, at least partially, a tacit acknowledgement that Biden is unpopular. So why aren’t we hearing Republicans worry about a third-party candidate?
Persons: CNN —, Joe Biden’s, , Cornel West’s, Joe Manchin, It’s, Biden, Let’s, Donald Trump, Democrat Al Gore, Ralph Nader’s, Gore, Republican George W, Bush, Nader, Trump, Hillary Clinton, don’t, FiveThirtyEight’s Geoffrey Skelley, We’re, Gary Johnson Organizations: CNN, , Democratic, Trump, Democrat, Florida –, Green Party, Republican, Biden, Republican Party, Quinnipiac University, Independent Locations: New Hampshire
Ron DeSantis struggling in his quest for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. Dean Obeidallah CNNHe currently trails the front-runner — twice-indicted former President Donald Trump — by more than 30 points in one recent Fox News poll. And wouldn’t the Mexican leader’s criticism likely help DeSantis with GOP voters, given their views on immigration? Let me add this caveat about DeSantis’ polling challenges, as others have: It’s still early in the 2024 race for the GOP nomination. To that point, DeSantis said last week, “I’m running to win in January and February.
Persons: Dean Obeidallah, Ron DeSantis, , Donald Trump, Maria Bartiromo, DeSantis, , — DeSantis, Trump, ” Trump, , we’ll, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Jeb Bush, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, I’m Organizations: CNN, Florida Gov, Dean Obeidallah CNN, Fox, The New York Times, Street, Politico, Fox News, Republican, Yale University, Harvard Law School, US Navy, Florida —, Trump, Quinnipiac, Disney, Twitter, Facebook, GOP, Democratic Locations: Florida, Mexico
North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum reacts during an event for announcing he enters the 2024 presidential race, joining a growing field of candidates hoping to topple Donald Trump and secure the Republican nomination, in Fargo, North Dakota, U.S. June 7, 2023. North Dakota governor and Republican presidential candidate Doug Burgum (R-N.D.) discussed his 2024 platform in a Sunday interview on NBC's "Meet the Press" in his latest effort to gain recognition with voters. Burgum believes in limited government and has stressed his focus on repairing the U.S. economy, energy policy and national security rather than engaging in "every culture war topic." Burgum is vying against 11 other Republican presidential bids including frontrunner and former president Donald Trump, who Burgum noted in the interview he would not do business with. The meetings have been aimed at stabilizing relations between the two countries amid talks of tightening U.S. investments in China.
Persons: Doug Burgum, Donald Trump, Burgum, Elon Musk, Janet Yellen Organizations: Republican, RealClear, Quinnipiac University Locations: Dakota, Fargo , North Dakota, U.S, North Dakota, China, United States
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the political scion and prominent vaccine skeptic who is challenging President Biden for the Democratic presidential nomination, reported an income of $7.8 million in the year leading up to his entry into the race, including nearly $1.6 million from his consulting work for a personal injury law firm known for litigation against pharmaceutical companies. The details came in a financial disclosure form filed Friday with the Federal Election Commission. It shows that Mr. Kennedy earned $5 million at his environmental law firm, Kennedy & Madonna, and a $516,000 salary and bonus as chairman and chief legal counsel of Children’s Health Defense, a nonprofit group he formed that has campaigned against vaccines. (The disclosure says he has been on leave from the organization since April, when he announced his campaign.) Mr. Kennedy, a leading skeptic of vaccinations and prescription medications, has gained a foothold in the race even as he has contorted facts about vaccine development and public health authorities and increasingly embraced conservative figures and causes.
Persons: Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Biden, Kennedy, Madonna, Mr Organizations: Democratic, Federal, Commission, Children’s Health Defense, Saint Anselm College Survey Center, Quinnipiac University Locations: New Hampshire
Opinion: Where Putin goes from here
  + stars: | 2023-06-25 | by ( Richard Galant | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +10 min
We’re looking back at the strongest, smartest opinion takes of the week from CNN and other outlets. CNN —“It is a stab in the back of our country and our people,” Russian President Vladimir Putin told his nation Saturday as he faced an unprecedented challenge from his former ally, Yevgeny Prighozin, head of the Wagner mercenary group. “The Russians were not stabbed in the back during World War I, as Putin suggested during his remarks on Saturday,” wrote Peter Bergen. Sound familiar?”“A keen student of Russian history, Putin is aware of the stakes here. The Wagner force served the Russian president as a useful tool he could control for foreign adventures.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Yevgeny Prighozin, Wagner, Tsar, Putin, Prighozin, , Alexander Lukashenko, Putin’s, , Peter Bergen, Nicholas II, ” Prighozin, CNN’s Nathan Hodge, Hodge, ” Putin’s, Mark Galeotti, John Roberts, Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch, “ what’s, Edmund, Burke, , Roe, Wade, Critics, ProPublica, Samuel Alito, Paul Singer, Alito, Singer, salmons, Singer’s, Clay Jones, you’re, Erwin Chemerinsky’s, Ann Telnaes “, Chemerinsky, Samuel Dickman, Allison Hope, Hunter Biden, Donald Trump Lisa Benson, Joe Biden’s, Donald Trump, Julian Zelizer, Biden, Trump, Norman Eisen, ” Alberto Gonzales, George W, Bush, Department’s, ” “, , Justin Gest, White, Joel Pett Organizations: CNN, Soviet, Kremlin, US, Quinnipiac University, Justice Department, GOP, Republicans, Trump, Agency Locations: Russia, Moscow, Belarus, Ukraine, , Europe, Alaska
Ron DeSantis and former Vice President Mike Pence, are attempting to take our nation backward by vowing to rename a military base in North Carolina in honor of Braxton Bragg, a slave-owning, former Confederate general. Fort Bragg became Fort Liberty earlier this month as part of a push to remove the names of Confederate leaders from military bases in the wake of protests over the police killing of George Floyd. Confederate President Jefferson Davis asked Bragg to leave his plantation and serve as a general. At the 1863 Battle of Chickamauga alone — where Bragg was uncharacteristically successful in defeating Union forces — patriotic US soldiers suffered 16,000 casualties. of Fort Bragg, Fort Robert E. Lee, and many other Military Bases.
Persons: Dean Obeidallah, America’s, Abraham Lincoln, Joe Biden, Ron DeSantis, Mike Pence, Braxton Bragg, Fort Bragg, George Floyd, DeSantis, , we’re, Pence, , Bragg, Jefferson Davis, Bruce Levine, Politifact.com, “ Bragg, ” DeSantis, Donald Trump, Trump, tweeting, Bill …, Fort Robert E, Lee, ” Trump, Biden, it’s, that’s, Republicans ’ Organizations: CNN, Dean Obeidallah CNN, Florida Gov, Confederate, Fort Liberty, North, GOP, Republican, Pentagon, Union, University of Illinois, United, Quinnipiac University, Trump, Twitter, Howard University, , Republicans, America Locations: Galveston , Texas, Union, North Carolina, Fort Bragg, , West Point, Louisiana, Chickamauga, University of Illinois Urbana, Champaign, United States
Trump's prior indictment in New York on charges alleging falsification of business documents didn't move the political needle much. But there is recent polling that explains what Americans think about the prospect of Trump being charged with crimes, including some specifically about an indictment related to his handling of classified documents. Meanwhile, 63% of Americans, called "taking highly classified documents from the White House and obstructing efforts to retrieve them" a serious crime. Ahead of Trump's indictment in Manhattan, Quinnipiac University asked Americans whether they thought criminal charges, not an indictment, should disqualify Trump from running. A slim majority of all voters, 52%, said that in his New York indictment, Trump has been treated like anyone else accused of those same crimes and hasn't been unfairly targeted.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump's, Trump, it's, Joe Biden, hasn't, Jan Organizations: , White House, Republicans, Trump, White, Yahoo, Quinnipiac University, NBC, Republican, GOP, DeSantis, Associated Press, NORC Center for Public Affairs Research Locations: New York, Manhattan, York, Florida
Donald Trump’s criminal cases, explained
  + stars: | 2023-06-09 | by ( Zachary B. Wolf | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +14 min
Trump was indicted back in March by the Manhattan district attorney on state charges related to hush-money payments to a former adult-film star in 2016. Smith is also overseeing other investigations related to Trump, including those regarding the January 6, 2021, insurrection and the 2020 election. That federal law deals with the illegal retention of “national defense information,” a broad term that encompasses classified documents and other sensitive government materials. Federal charges related to classified documents likely do not either. But people do routinely serve prison time for retention of classified documents, conspiracy and obstruction.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, He’s, Jack Smith, Trump’s, Trump, Aaron Burr, Wasn’t, isn’t Trump, Smith, Joe Biden’s, Jim Trusty, , Elie Honig, CNN’s Marshall Cohen, CNN’s Evan Perez, Joe Biden, Honig, , Robert Ray, Ray, it’s, David Axelrod, ‘ They’re, , Richard Hasen, don’t, Jean Carroll, We’re, hasn’t, Hasen, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Nixon’s, Spiro Agnew, Agnew, Burr, We’ve, Let’s Organizations: CNN, US Department of Justice, Trump, White, National Archives, Prosecutors, Lago, USC, FBI, DOJ, That’s, Manhattan, Justice Department, Republican, Democratic, University of California, Senate, State, Quinnipiac University, Service Locations: Lago, Miami, Manhattan, Florida, Trump . Miami, Washington, New York, Dade County, Los Angeles, United States, New York City, Fulton County , Georgia, York
This reflects history, which shows that while being vice president often correlates with success in future presidential ambitions, it is far from a guarantee. Think about recent vice presidents who have tried to upgrade their positions. That doesn’t seem like a particularly high success rate, though we should remember that many vice presidents (like Cheney) don’t run. About 55% of vice presidents who ran for their party’s nomination became the head of their party’s ticket. The last time it happened was 1940, when President Franklin Roosevelt crushed his vice president, John Nance Garner.
Persons: Joe Biden, Barack Obama’s, Mike Pence, Biden, Dick Cheney, Democrat Al Gore, Dan Quayle, Richard Nixon, Kamala Harris, Cheney, don’t, Pence, Donald Trump, Trump, White, Franklin Roosevelt, John Nance Garner, Quayle, George W, Bush, George H.W, George H.W . Bush, Obama, Trump’s, , Biden didn’t Organizations: CNN, Democrat, Biden, GOP, House, Republican, Quinnipiac University, Trump, Fox Locations: George H.W .
Former Vice President Mike Pence addresses the GOP Lincoln-Reagan Dinner on June 3, 2021 in Manchester, New Hampshire. Pence's visit to New Hampshire would be the first time back since he was Vice President. Former Vice President Mike Pence filed paperwork Monday to run for president in 2024, Federal Election Commission documents showed. Pence, who served under former President Donald Trump, is expected to personally launch his bid for the GOP nomination on Wednesday. Pence in recent months has said that the executive branch under Trump and Pence could have done more to rein in spending.
Persons: Mike Pence, Reagan, Pence's, Pence, Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Trump, DeSantis, Joe Biden, Biden, Trump's, Nikki Haley Organizations: GOP Lincoln, GOP, Trump, Florida Gov, U.S . House, Pence, Social Security, Medicare, Electoral, U.S . Capitol, Capitol, Quinnipiac University, Republican, South Carolina Gov, CNBC Locations: Manchester , New Hampshire, New Hampshire, U.S, Indiana
Republican gubernatorial candidate for Florida Ron DeSantis with his wife Casey DeSantis speaks to supporters during an election night watch party at the Convention Center in Tampa, Florida, on November 8, 2022. Ron DeSantis announced the launch of his 2024 presidential campaign on Wednesday, setting the Republican contender on a collision course with former President Donald Trump in the race for the GOP nomination. Musk then started a new Twitter Spaces where DeSantis announced his presidential bid. Trump and his allies have assailed DeSantis' record, his political abilities and even his personality, while amplifying negative news about the governor. That result showed Trump extending his gains and DeSantis losing ground from a previous Quinnipiac survey in late March.
Persons: Florida Ron DeSantis, Casey DeSantis, Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump, DeSantis, Elon Musk, David Sacks, Musk, Bryan Griffin, Trump, Read Organizations: Florida, Convention, Florida Gov, GOP, Fox News, Democratic, Trump, Trump PAC, Quinnipiac University, Republican Locations: Tampa , Florida, DeSantis, Quinnipiac
Ron DeSantis is polling at RFK Jr.'s level
  + stars: | 2023-04-30 | by ( Harry Enten | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +5 min
Ron DeSantis has spent the past few months running to the right ahead of his expected entry into the 2024 Republican presidential primary campaign. So far at least, those efforts have not paid off in Republican primary polling, with DeSantis falling further behind the current front-runner, former President Donald Trump. Early polling problemsThe Fox poll is not alone in showing DeSantis floundering. Candidates polling the way DeSantis is now have gone on to win about 20% of the time. Moderates and liberals made up about 30% of potential Republican primary voters in the Quinnipiac poll.
But if the headlines stemming from the annual report of the Social Security trustees jangled you, take a deep breath. The report, released on March 31, forecasts that the Social Security retirement trust fund reserves will be depleted in 2033. What does the new Social Security forecast mean for current and future retirees? But the trust fund also can accumulate balances when Social Security runs surpluses, as has been the case for the last several decades. A: Social Security collects FICA contributions only up to a certain level of wages - $160,200 this year.
Former President Donald Trump has been hit with about 30 criminal charges related to alleged document fraud in the indictment issued against him by a New York grand jury, NBC reported Friday. Trump, who is the leading contender for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, is scheduled to be arraigned in Manhattan court on Tuesday. The Trump Organization recorded payments that Trump made to Cohen for that purpose as "legal expenses." Daniels, whose legal name is Stephanie Clifford, was paid to keep silent about her claim that she had sex with Trump in 2006. Trump is the first U.S. president, former or otherwise, to be charged in a criminal case.
Former President Donald Trump was indicted by a grand jury in New York. A presidential candidate can still run for office despite being indicted — or even convicted — of a crime. The grand jury's decision to indict Trump makes him the first former president in US history to be indicted on a felony charge. A Quinnipiac University national poll released Wednesday found that 57% of respondents believed criminal charges should disqualify Trump from office. Respondents' political leanings had an impact on their answers; 75% of Republicans believed the charges should not disqualify Trump, while 88% of Democrats believed the opposite.
Money markets and currencies were unmoved on Friday morning after a grand jury’s decision to press criminal charges was announced on Thursday night. While pressing charges against a former leader can amount to a dangerous political tool if used frivolously, it also shows that future American leaders are not immune to criminal charges, creating an extra incentive for them to behave. But moments of high political drama make politicians run to their corners of the boxing ring. Follow @thereallsl on TwitterCONTEXT NEWSFormer U.S. President Donald Trump was indicted by a Manhattan grand jury on March 30 and is expected to face criminal charges next week. The poll found 46% of Republican and Republican-leaning voters support Trump, while 32% support Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
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