Trump had sent out a fundraising email over the weekend telling supporters that “all hell will break loose” once the hearing began and calling for a “MASSIVE outpouring of peaceful patriotic support”.
But as his motorcade made its way from Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue to the highly fortified legal precinct, the throng of US and international reporters far outweighed the few hundred supporters who heeded his call.
It was nonetheless quite a spectacle. Satellite TV trucks and news crews lined the pavements of Lower Manhattan, stretching several blocks. Helicopters flew overhead while swathes of New York police officers stood at every street corner.
And in College Pond Park, opposite the court, protesters and counterprotesters aired their grievances.
One man held a flag that read “Trump 2028” – a reference, he explained, to Donald Trump Jr “taking over” the presidency from his father for that year’s election.
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Another man stood on a park bench playing a flute and wearing a sandwich board with an illustration of Trump screaming while blindfolded with an N-95 COVID mask.
And a group of fans wearing Make America Great Again caps stood around a giant flag emblazoned with the words “Trump or Death”.
The real action, however, happened inside the court on Monday and Tuesday (US time), as prosecutors and defence lawyers began the challenging task of trying to find an impartial jury in one of the nation’s most Democratic cities.
As dozens of Manhattan residents were brought in, both sides attempted to eliminate problematic potential jurors: firstly through a 42-part questionnaire, then through direct questioning, and finally by striking out unwanted candidates due to bias or other reasons.
And then there was the spectacle of Trump himself: entering and exiting Judge Juan Merchan’s courtroom as the first US president in history to ever face criminal charges.
Gone was the incendiary Republican’s typical bravado and bluster.
Absent, as usual, was his wife Melania, who is rarely by his side these days and has not yet committed to being part of his 2024 presidential campaign.
“Stay tuned,” is all she said when a reporter in Florida asked about her absences recently.
And on the first day of the trial before jury selection began, Trump even appeared to doze off as lawyers argued over what evidence they could present about his alleged affair with porn star Stormy Daniels, who Trump’s fixer Michael Cohen paid $US130,000 to silence on the eve of the 2016 election.
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Fortunately, the 77-year-old presidential candidate was far more engaged the next day, and also surprised many of us by swapping his trademark dark suit and red tie for a new, lighter blue ensemble. Was it an attempt to look less “pale, male and stale” given the importance of winning over suburban women at the election? (Notably, Biden, 81, is also increasingly wearing lighter shades of blue.)
“I’ve never seen him wearing that before,” quipped an American reporter in the overflow room where journalists had to watch a live feed because prospective jurors had filled the main courtroom next door to capacity.
It was an unforgettable few days with a front-row seat to history. And as I walked back to my hotel, I couldn’t help but notice the words of Thomas Jefferson engraved at the top of the building where Trump will spend the next six weeks:
“Equal and Exact Justice To All Men Of Whatever State or Persuasion.”
I wonder what the third president of the United States would think about the nation’s 45th.
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