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The Trump Indictment: A Changed Landscape

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Re “ ” (front page, June 9): The indictment of Donald Trump heralds a new chapter in American history. His trial could come sometime next year during the Republican primary season. He will continue to tell his followers that he has done nothing wrong and that this is all part of a vendetta by the Washington elite.

His followers will continue to support him. If he is found guilty in any of his trials, he will appeal. If he is nominated, the appeals process will play out during the election campaign.

He could be elected and then have a guilty verdict upheld as he is about to be sworn into office. Mr. Trump and the special counsel Jack Smith serve as the protagonists in the first act of a Shakespearean tragedy.

The full effects on America of Mr. Smith’s essential action will not be known until the final act. Sidney Weissman Highland Park, Ill.

Is no one above the law? We are about to find out. The stakes couldn’t be higher if the country hopes to remain a legitimate democracy. Tom McGraw Grand Rapids, Mich.

The indictment of Donald Trump on federal criminal charges might improve his odds of receiving the Republican nomination, but it almost certainly means that if nominated, he would lose the general election. It may increase the sympathy and anger of millions of his hard-core supporters. They will give him even more money to run and turn out in even greater numbers in the primaries, but it will not persuade many, if any, supporters of President Biden to vote against him in November 2024.

This is not yet a banana republic. The greater number of Americans who voted for Mr. Biden in 2020 will continue to believe that this and future indictments are legitimate.

Even if Mr. Trump manages to beat all the charges against him, he has been further disgraced by all these legal battles. And the effect of the indictments after the lessons of the Jan.

6 hearings will bring new voters, particularly first-time voters, to Mr. Biden. If he remains healthy, President Biden wins again.

Allen Smith Salisbury, Md. Journalists need to get to the meat of the Republicans’ support of Donald Trump’s behavior in the classified documents case and ask them the following questions: Are you saying you do not trust the Florida grand jury, made up of ordinary citizens from a state that twice voted for Mr. Trump? The prosecutor presents the facts, but the grand jury votes on whether to indict.

Do you really think all of are on an anti-Trump witch hunt? Why are you making judgments about this case when you don’t know the charges or the facts? It sounds as if you are advocating for Mr. Trump to be able to break the law at will with no consequences; do you deny that? Stop allowing Republican politicians to hide behind specious arguments bereft of facts or even common sense. They are spouting anti-democratic nonsense, and the press should be exposing them for what they are.

Jean Phillips Florence, Ore. In all the discussions, among all the various talking heads, about the various aspects of this new criminal indictment, one significant factor has been overlooked. At no time, during any judicial proceedings, will Donald Trump ever take the witness stand.

It will never happen. Stuart Altshuler New York It is vital that Donald Trump’s trial be scheduled to start no later than four months after his arraignment, so that the trial can be finished well before the Iowa caucuses. This can be done by actions of the judge assigned to the case immediately after the arraignment, setting strict time limits for all pretrial matters.

Both parties have experienced attorneys who can promptly complete pretrial matters, including discovery and pretrial motions, within that four-month period so that the trial can end well before the voters have to make their decisions. Robert Lerner Milwaukee Jack Smith, all I can say is thank you. Thank you for believing in our country.

Thank you for trying to uphold our democracy. Thank you for your courage. I have tears in my eyes.

You have restored my hope. Grateful. Stay well.

Dody Osborne Cox Guilford, Conn. Re “ ” (front page, May 28) and “ ” (nytimes. com, May 29): As a midwife working with pregnant people and new parents, I found these articles — about increasing rates of maternal mortality from hypertension, mental illness and other causes and about parents charged with murder or reckless endangerment — heartbreaking.

This represents the total failure of our society to support pregnant people and new parents. After receiving only rudimentary maternity services with limited access to care, new parents are turned out of the medical system without proper follow-up and support. Our health care system has not responded to the increasing challenges of parenting in the modern world, leaving parents and children to face preventable dangers.

Patient-centered care in pregnancy and improved postpartum services could prevent the suffering and deaths through early identification of risks and swift intervention. Access to care is far too limited. There has been enough hand-wringing about our horrible statistics.

We need immediate investment in maternity services, expanded access to obstetric and midwifery care, mental health services, postpartum care and support for new parents. How many more deaths will it take for us to invest in the well-being and safety of our parents and children? Laura Weil San Francisco Our nation’s failure to properly care for expectant and new mothers and their babies speaks to a larger problem: Our health care system is siloed and focused on delivering urgent services. We treat pregnancy as an event, focused on a safe delivery and a healthy baby and mother, and our systems respond to problems only when they arise.

There is a pressing need to address increasing maternal and infant morbidity and mortality — and the many other health issues across the country that are rapidly getting worse — by considering the entirety of factors that make up a person’s health and well-being. We need to spend more time upstream, creating the vital conditions that are key to good health and well-being, like a healthy environment, humane housing, meaningful work and sufficient wealth. If we increase our investments in order to create the conditions people need to thrive, we can build the long-lasting change that is needed to prevent many serious health problems.

This is much harder than treating a single person presenting in the emergency room, but it is a much smarter investment for our long-term health and well-being. Alan Lieber Morristown, N. J.

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From: nytimes
URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/09/opinion/letters/trump-indictment.html

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