How Trump’s Conviction Could Reshape the Election

特朗普的定罪如何重塑选举

The Daily

新闻

2024-06-03

31 分钟
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Last week, Donald J. Trump became the first U.S. former president to be convicted of a crime when a jury found that he had falsified business records to conceal a sex scandal. Maggie Haberman, a senior political correspondent for The Times, and Reid J. Epstein, who also covers politics, discuss how the conviction might shape the remaining months of the presidential race. Guest: Nate Cohn, who is the chief political analyst for The New York Times. Maggie Haberman, a senior political correspondent for The New York Times. Reid J. Epstein, who covers politics for The New York Times.

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  • From the New York Times, I'm Michael Balbaro.

  • This is the daily today how the criminal conviction of Donald Trump will shape the remaining months of the presidential race and potentially its outcome.

  • My colleagues Nate Cohn, Maggie Haberman, and Reid Epstein explain.

  • It's Monday, June 3.

  • Hello, Nate.

  • Hello, Michael.

  • So it's been three days since Donald Trump was convicted of 34 felony charges.

  • And now that the dust is starting to settle, it feels like we have to turn to the question of its impact on the election.

  • And you are our resident polling expert at the times, and so we want you to frame that question with as much data as we possibly can.

  • There's always been a sense that for a lot of voters, a Trump conviction wouldn't change a thing.

  • So whose vote, according to all the polls you conduct and study, might this conviction actually influence?

  • What's that universe?

  • Well, we haven't yet conducted any polls since the conviction, so all of this is strictly theoretical.