She did. Two nights ago Fani Willis, the DA of Fulton County, Georgia, indicted Donald J Trump and eighteen co-conspirators, listing 41 total felony counts; Trump himself was charged with 13 felony counts. In addition to the communal racketeering charge, the charges include “solicitation of violation of oath by public officer,” “conspiracy to commit impersonating a public officer,” “conspiracy to commit forgery in the first degree,” “conspiracy to commit false statements and writings,” and “conspiracy to commit filing false documents.”
Trump is now facing 91 criminal charges, some in federal courts, some in state courts. Andy Borowicz, whose humorous memes arrive daily, posted this morning, suggesting that Melania was disappointed, thinking that Donald wouldn’t have time to show up in divorce court. His niece, Mary Trump, acknowledges that Trump’s new criminal enterprise is an extension of one he began years ago, only that now he’s brought people other than his own family into it.
More amazing than the 91 criminal counts that he’s facing is that Republicans still believe in him. He leads all other candidates by as many as forty percent. Only if the all the other candidates call him out will it be possible to save the Republican Party. As it stands right now the entire leadership of the party has chained themselves to the Titanic’s railings, and this only after it hit the iceberg.
The following was taken from an interview Geoff Duncan, the Lt. Governor of Georgia, gave to NPR this morning.
“Georgia's former Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan is calling on fellow Republicans to seize the Georgia indictment of former President Donald Trump as a "pivot point" for the GOP, as the party seeks to re-take the White House in 2024.
On NPR's Morning Edition Wednesday, Duncan urged "U.S. senators, conservative governors, state legislators – everybody that has a voice and a platform – should speak up as a Republican, and tell Donald Trump to get out of this race because it's not good for the party. But more importantly, it's not good for this country."
Nearly two-thirds of Republicans, 63%, now say they want Trump to run for president again in 2024 and 74% would support him if he were the Republican nominee, according to an recent (August 2023) poll conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Analysis
Why the Trump indictments have not moved the needle with Republicans
This is Trump's fourth indictment since leaving office, but it's the first in a legal jurisdiction where cameras are permitted to show the proceedings.
When asked if televising a Trump trial in Georgia would benefit the country, Duncan told Morning Edition host Leila Fadel, "I think the more Americans can see and specifically Republicans... [the] crazy series of events that played out, the more they can see it in three dimension, I think the quicker we're going to start to heal as a party and move past Donald Trump. I just, I think history is going to prove that Donald Trump was one of the biggest mistakes this country's ever made."
Duncan was called to testify before the Fulton County grand jury, and hours prior to that appearance, Trump took to his social media platform, Truth Social, warning Duncan not to testify and calling the former Lt. Gov. a "loser" and a "nasty disaster." Asked if he saw this as an instance of witness tampering or intimidation, Duncan responded, "It certainly didn't deter me from answering the questions of the grand jury, getting there on time and fulfilling my civic duties in front of the grand jury."
Trump and the other 18 defendants have until August 25th to voluntarily surrender to authorities in Fulton County, Ga.
The following excerpts are from an exchange between former Georgia Lt. Governor Geoff Duncan and NPR's Leila Fadel, which has been edited for clarity.
What is it about this case that makes it maybe more significant?
What we watched play out right after the 2020 election cycle here in Georgia was just the series of what felt like, at the time, very coordinated events... to just hoodwink Republicans [with the impression] that everybody was corrupt in Georgia around the election system. And it was wrong. And it's taken us two and a half years to get to this point, unfortunately.
Why does he continue to have such popularity even as he racks up felony charges?
Donald Trump has confused Republicans across the country to think that the louder and more angry you are, the more conservative you are...I'm a Republican because I believe in the conservative principles of smaller government and public safety and national security. I believe in states rights. Those are the core tenets why a majority of Republicans got into the Republican Party. But Donald Trump's confused us. And this is a painful healing process for us.
This is our opportunity. If we, as Republicans, don't use this moment of insanity inside our party as a pivot point, then shame on us.
Do you want this case in Georgia, and the arraignment, to be televised?
Yeah, I do. I think the more Americans can see, and specifically Republicans, the more Republicans can see of the erratic, just a crazy series of events that played out – the more they can see it in three dimension – I think the quicker we're going to start to heal as a party and move past Donald Trump.
I just think history is going to prove that Donald Trump was one of the biggest mistakes this country's ever made.
Take a load off, Fani
Take a load for free
Take a load off, Fani
And (And, and)
You put the load right on me (You put the load right on me)
Where it belongs. On all of us. Get rid of this clown. Close down the shitshow.