Of Course Republicans Still Want Trump After All These Indictments

But those fretting over his chances against Biden forget one key fact.

Charlie Riedel/AP

Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily.

The New York Times and Siena College are out with the latest 2024 polls, and the outlook is as expected. Former president Donald Trump, despite facing mounting criminal charges, is crushing his rivals. He’s in a dead heat against Joe Biden, with 43 percent of registered voters backing each candidate in an increasingly likely rematch.

It’s not hard to feel a mix of disappointment and dread looking at these numbers. How can whole swaths of the American electorate support a man whose legal peril crosses the spectrum of exceptionally dumb to outright despicable? It seems many have shrugged off Trump’s classified documents scandal as some kind of bureaucratic oopsie. After two and a half years, many who may have recoiled on January 6 have apparently come around to the idea that hey, the guy had a point. Even Ivanka and Jared, are reportedly impressed and thinking of rejoining the band. 

If these feel like familiar dynamics, it’s because they are. And that at least offers some comfort to anyone who doesn’t want the twice-impeached, racist plague reinstalled in the White House. Republicans do not have to care about the newest reasons to hate Trump, and there are many, in order for him to lose one more time. It only requires that enough people that didn’t want him to be president before still don’t want him to be. And how many people, after all the indictments, have actually changed places? That’s the real question.

None of this is to say that Biden’s reelection does not have real threats. Plenty of people have legitimate reservations about the president; others are disappointed in his economic record despite the sustained, very positive data; a good portion of voters are reasonably exhausted by the mere thought of a Biden-Trump redux and could very well stay at home next November. But Trump’s grip on the party, even amid his current legal jeopardy, shouldn’t prompt too much surprise. 

As Trump said himself, he could shoot down a man on Fifth Avenue and barely suffer the consequences with his core fans. The problem is all the other people think he sounds like an ass. 

BEFORE YOU CLICK AWAY...

Trump is clamping down on the media—using lawsuits, lies, intimidation, and a thuggish Federal Communications Commission. Corporate media are caving, but Mother Jones won’t back down. To help us stand strong, a generous board member has chipped in a $50,000 digital matching gift. Help us make the most of it!

Every contribution through September 30 will be matched dollar-for-dollar.

We have nearly 50 years of experience standing up to bullies. Government intimidation, nuisance lawsuits, threats to our nonprofit status—we’ve seen it all. Yet because we’re supported by a community of readers like you, we’re still here and still reporting like hell. Please stand with us. Every dollar you give will go twice as far.

payment methods

BEFORE YOU CLICK AWAY...

Trump is clamping down on the media—using lawsuits, lies, intimidation, and a thuggish Federal Communications Commission. Corporate media are caving, but Mother Jones won’t back down. To help us stand strong, a generous board member has chipped in a $50,000 digital matching gift. Help us make the most of it!

Every contribution through September 30 will be matched dollar-for-dollar.

We have nearly 50 years of experience standing up to bullies. Government intimidation, nuisance lawsuits, threats to our nonprofit status—we’ve seen it all. Yet because we’re supported by a community of readers like you, we’re still here and still reporting like hell. Please stand with us. Every dollar you give will go twice as far.

payment methods

We Recommend

Latest

Sign up for our free newsletter

Subscribe to the Mother Jones Daily to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.

Get our award-winning magazine

Save big on a full year of investigations, ideas, and insights.

Subscribe

Support our journalism

Help Mother Jones' reporters dig deep with a tax-deductible donation.

Donate