The former president is also the subject of a tax investigation court case in New York.
During his victorious 2016 election campaign, then-Republican candidate Donald Trump claimed that his "people" were so loyal that he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and not lose any voters.
While many are sure that's true, the Trump who awaits the opportunity to run for reelection in 2024 may face a much tougher test: What was he doing with and how can he explain the unauthorized presence of classified documents in his Florida residence at Mar-a-Lago?
On Aug. 8, federal agents seized dozens of documents that had an assortment of classified documents, including 48 empty folders marked highly secret.
In principle, this should be very damaging for Trump or anyone else given that he created risk from disclosing secret records, in some cases compromising sensitive information about U.S. military resources. There are people who in the course of espionage or in leaking material to the media, have done the same thing, and they are either in prison or fighting charges that could send them there.
But Trump is an expert in distorting the issues, taking them to the court of public opinion and using them to excite his supporters.
Just look at the information surrounding the riot on Jan. 6, 2021, involving hundreds of Trump supporters who, after attending a rally led by the then president, tried to occupy the Capitol building to prevent Congress from certifying the results of the November 2020 presidential election.
Trump is also the subject of both a tax investigation court case in New York and another in Georgia for trying to pressure state officials there to change the voting results in the election. But of all the investigations, it's the one into the stolen White House documents that has Trump and the Republicans on edge.
Republicans present themselves as a patriotic, law-abiding party, although now they are apparently demanding impunity for their leader despite the fact that no one knows who saw or could have seen the secret documents he took with him after he illegally ordering them to be declassified.*
It's these documents and the controversy surrounding them that's occupying Americans' attention two months before the elections that Republicans had hoped to devote to criticizing the Biden administration. In contrast, the "patriots" are now accused of putting the country's security in danger, and the supporters of law and order are accused of violating what they claim to defend.
And Trump is the villain of the piece.
*Editor's note: It has not been legally proven that Trump stole documents, but he is being investigated for removing classified materials from the White House in possible violation of the law. Whether or not he ordered them to be declassified, or if it was within his authority to do so, remains in dispute.
Donald Trump, el villano del drama
El expresidente es, además, objeto de una investigación de corte fiscal en Nueva York
WASHINGTON. Durante su victoriosa campaña electoral de 2016, el entonces candidato republicano Donald Trump aseguró que su popularidad era tal que podría matar a una persona en la Quinta Avenida de NY, y saldría incólume.
Muchos están seguros de que así sería, el Trump que espera la oportunidad de presentar otra vez su candidatura en las elecciones de 2024 puede enfrentar una prueba mucho más difícil: ¿qué hacía, cómo explica, la indebida presencia de documentación clasificada en su casa de descanso en Mar-a-Lago, en Florida?
Docenas de documentos en diversos estados de clasificación fueron descubiertos en una requisa efectuada por agentes federales el 8 de agosto pasado. Entre lo encontrado hay 48 carpetas vacías, pero marcadas como de mayor importancia y confidencialidad.
En principio debería ser muy dañino para Trump, y para cualquier otro: documentación secreta, que en algunos casos compromete información confidencial sobre fuentes y recursos militares estadounidenses puestas en peligro. Hay varias personas que sea en aras de espionaje o de filtraciones periodísticas hicieron lo mismo y están en la cárcel o luchan contra la posibilidad de llegar ahí.
Pero Trump es un experto en tergiversar sus problemas, llevarlos al tribunal de la opinión pública y usarlos para excitar a sus leales.
Véase si no la información alrededor del motín del 6 de enero de 2021, protagonizado por cientos de partidarios de Trump, que tras asistir a un mitin encabezado por el todavía mandatario trataron de ocupar el edificio del Capitolio para presionar a que el Congreso no certificara los resultados de las elecciones presidenciales, de noviembre de 2020.
Trump es, además, objeto de una investigación de corte fiscal en Nueva York, y otra, por tratar de presionar a funcionarios del estado de Georgia para cambiar los resultados de la votación en los comicios. Pero de todos, la indagación en torno a los documentos sustraídos de la Casa Blanca es la que tiene en vilo a Trump, y de paso, a los republicanos.
Los republicanos se presentan como el partido del patriotismo y el respeto a la ley, pero ahora parecen demandar impunidad para su dirigente a pesar de que nadie sabe quién vio o pudo haber visto los documentos secretos que llevó consigo, de manera ilegal ordenando su desclasificación.
Son esos papeles y la controversia a su alrededor lo que ocupa la atención de los estadounidenses, a 2 meses de las elecciones que los republicanos esperaban dedicar a denunciar los problemas del gobierno de Biden. A cambio, los "patriotas" son acusados ahora de poner en peligro la seguridad del país, y los partidarios de la ley y el orden son los acusados en juicios por violar lo que dicen defender.
Y Trump es el villano del drama.
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These costly U.S. attacks failed to achieve their goals, but were conducted in order to inflict a blow against Yemen, for daring to challenge the Israelis.
These costly U.S. attacks failed to achieve their goals, but were conducted in order to inflict a blow against Yemen, for daring to challenge the Israelis.