June 20, 2023

The judge in Trump’s federal persecution…er, prosecution has set Trump’s trial for August 14, which is only nine days before the first Republican presidential debate. Although it seems as if the judge wishes to get the matter cleared before the election itself, there is a smarter way to go…assuming one trusts the conservative judges on the Supreme Court to abide by the Constitution (which I’m not sure I do).

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This morning, Judge Aileen Cannon (a Trump appointee) issued a scheduling order setting a trial date in the Trump matter. It states in relevant part as follows:

This case is hereby set for a Criminal Jury Trial during the two-week period commencing August 14, 2023, or as soon thereafter as the case may be called. [snip] All pre-trial motions…must be filed by July 24, 2023.

She also left open the grounds for pushing the trial back (or “continuing” it) to a later date. There are a lot of things to be said here.

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First, as noted, the trial is set to take place as Trump prepares for the first Republican debate, which is scheduled for August 23. Trump has remarkable focus, but preparing for a nationally-televised debate while you’re engaged in a two-week trial that can end with your getting a 100-year-long prison sentence before a hostile mediator (Fox News is sponsoring the debate) is ludicrous.

Second, considering the immensity of what’s going on, giving a defendant only eight weeks to prepare for a two-week trial is ridiculous.

Third, it’s more than likely that the trial will be continued (probably more than once), taking it smack-dab into the full campaign season. Talk about election interference.

Image by Andrea Widburg.

What the judge should do is tell Trump’s lawyers to file immediately a dispositive motion to dismiss the case, and then she should instantly rule on it…in Trump’s favor. After that, the matter can be put on an accelerated track to the Supreme Court because (a) Trump’s unique status as president makes this an original issue about which no higher court has yet opined and (b) it is a matter of national importance.

Even if Trump is having a hard time retaining counsel (given that radical leftists are using McCarthy tactics to disbar conservative attorneys, destroying their livelihoods), and even if his attorneys are mediocre (I have no idea whether they are or not), it shouldn’t be difficult to craft a colorable motion to dismiss. The internet is overflowing with people pointing out the myriad abuses in the complaint.

Trump’s position as president meant he had plenary, or absolute, power over national security questions, including the classification scheme. Anything he removed from the White House to the slightly lessened security of Mar-a-Lago (the Secret Service is always there) was de facto declassified.