MaddowBlog-Trump sentenced to unconditional discharge in New York hush money case [View all]
Out of options, the Republican president-elect faced the one thing he desperately tries to avoid: accountability for wrongdoing.
https://bsky.app/profile/stevebenen.com/post/3lffidy2yb22u
Now that he's officially a convicted felon, it's worth appreciating the bigger picture:
Trump, out of options, faced the one thing he desperately tries to avoid: accountability for wrongdoing
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/trump-sentence-new-york-hush-money-case-rcna187107
The president-elect and his legal defense team explored every possible opportunity to derail sentencing in the case, even appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court, pointing to its highly controversial immunity ruling from last year. But while four Republican-appointed jurists Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh indicated the day before sentencing that they would have sided with the defendant, they were in the minority.
Out of options, Trump faced the one thing he desperately tries to avoid: accountability for wrongdoing.
Judge Juan Merchan delivered an unconditional discharge sentence to the president-elect on Friday morning, making him a convicted felon in the eyes of New York state law, while wishing the defendant "godspeed" in his second term......
Stepping back, it's worth appreciating the fact that Trump has racked up an amazing number of firsts during his relatively brief political career. The Republican is, for example, the first president to be impeached twice. Hes also the first candidate to ever win the presidency despite never having served the public in any way.
Trump is the first former president to have been held liable for sexual abuse. He was the first president to get caught overseeing a fraudulent charity. And a fraudulent university. And a business that was found to have repeatedly committed fraud.
In 2021, Trump became the first president to deny his successor a peaceful transition of power in the wake of his defeat. He was similarly the first president to try to hold onto power in defiance of election voters.
In 2023, Trump became the first former president to be indicted on criminal charges, only to soon after become the first former president to be also indicted on federal criminal charges.
And in 2025, just 10 days before his second inaugural, he can add a new first to the list: Americans have had dozens of presidents, but the convicted felon is now the first president sentenced for a crime.....
But as a political matter, the end result is the same: The president-elect can disagree with the jury's verdict, he can continue to condemn the judge who heard the case, and he can continue to pursue appeals, but now that he's been sentenced, he's still poised to enter the White House as a convicted felon.