My immediate reaction on hearing that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg maneuvered the indictment of Donald Trump in the โhush moneyโ case surrounding Stormy Daniels was that the out-of-control Bragg had just elected Trump as the 47th president of the United States.
My second thought was the fear that he may have instigated a civil war.
But Iโll go with my immediate reaction. Itโs better for all of us.
As the Zen Buddhists say, โFirst thought, best thought.โ
Law professor Jonathan Turley is already calling the indictment โlegally pathetic,โ and thatโs about the size of it. You donโt have to be a professor to figure that out.
This is the weaponization of our legal system taken to the nth power: Trump Derangement Syndrome gone berserk.
Most Americansโeven many Democrats, though some will be afraid to say soโwill see this instantly as a purely political prosecution, as it so obviously is.
What Bragg, in his high dudgeon, probably didnโt think about was that the Republicans actually won the popular vote in the midterm elections by 5 million. He probably just added another 5 million or 10 millionโpossibly even more.
He may have even extended that Republican majority outside the reach of whatever cheating that his party is alleged to have done or be capable of without genuinely starting a civil war.
It will be interesting to see what Trumpโs primary competition on the GOP side will decide to do at this point.
Ron DeSantis would be smart to rally around Trump and decline to run. That would be seen as patriotic and redound well for the Florida governor in future presidential elections, making him a front-runner for 2028.
He has already announced he will fight Trumpโs extradition from Florida, but he should also consider carefully declining to run this year, because if he continues with his 2024 plan, the reverse could easily occur and make him politically extinct on the national stage.
Itโs difficult to see how he can directly criticize Trump at this juncture without alienating his partyโs base.