Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Live Reaction to Donald Trump's Arraignment
Episode Date: April 4, 2023On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Rosanna Lockwood is in for Piers and covers live reaction to Former US President Donald Trump being in court in New York, being the first US President ...to be charged with a crime. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the app. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you so much. Jeremy Kyle there handing over.
What a 90 minutes of analysis that was.
What is going down in Manhattan today?
The lower court, Manhattan with Donald Trump.
They're the 45th American president, of course,
standing in front of criminal court facing charges,
currently under arrest, some 34 charges against him as well.
We have these pictures from court,
and the question is, have the Democrats won today?
If this is a politically motivated witch hunt, indeed,
have they won in the short term?
by getting these photographs out there?
Or is it a bad long-term player?
We'll be discussing that plenty more.
But if there's one thing that could be said about this,
it is Donald Trump, once again,
making lemonade out of lemons.
I'm going to be joined here in the studio
and currently joined the studio
by author and historian Tessa Dunlough
and by Times Radio host, Adam Bolton.
Just the People.
I want alongside you on a day like this
because we're going to be talking a lot
about historical context, both of you.
Let's just start by getting your reaction
to what we've seen so far.
out in the last hour. I mean, Adam, I know you're a keen historian yourself, but obviously, Tessie,
you're an accredited historian. What do you think this means within the sort of great panoply
of modern US history and the presence that you've covered in your career? Well, it is the first time
that we've seen a president indicted. So that's the first. But then Donald Trump was also
the first president to be impeached twice. So the Donald Trump show continues. My own feeling,
is that this doesn't take him any nearer to the White House.
It will help him raise money for his campaign in the short run,
but he's going to have a lot of legal problems going ahead,
which may even deny him the Republican nomination.
But what is absolutely clear is the majority of Americans
don't want him back as president.
And even within the electoral college,
he looks doomed on that front,
and that may be why his own party decide to ditch him
in the course of campaign year next year.
Your view hasn't been swayed at all by the amount of campaign.
campaign donations they managed to raise over the weekend?
Well, by his standards, it's not that much.
I mean, he's got $8 million.
And, you know, one of the sort of dirty little secrets of Donald Trump
is that campaigning has always been a way for him to raise money.
So he's continued to do that.
But he hasn't built up the level of support which he had before the rate of donations.
And indeed, if you look at the demonstrations in New York today, which he called for,
I mean, they're pretty pathetic that Congresswoman,
Marjorie Taylor Green with her bullhorn
was pretty much drowned out and taken away.
You mean you weren't convinced when she yelled out
he was Nelson Mandela and then Jesus?
You weren't swayed by her rhetoric?
Well, it doesn't matter about me.
The crowd wasn't particularly impressed either.
They all carried on waving their balance
and pushing their own particular level.
You know, we didn't see January the 6th today, did we?
No, we didn't.
But I think what we're looking at is something bigger,
more systemic than Donald Trump.
were being briefly distracted by the giant kind of personality.
But actually, the polarisation of American politics,
what this has done to either side
has led to really the sort of democratic rot,
the lack of faith in all their key institutions,
which has propped up that country
and led it to be the greatest country on the planet in the 20th century.
Yeah, but on the other hand, people are saying,
look, he's politically motivated the district attorney
that he said that he was going to prosecute Donald Trump.
All true.
But in America,
elect your district attorney anyway, and therefore he has a campaign campaign platform.
When they don't know what's true or not, when there's misinformation spread around like
Marjorie.
Yeah, we'll blame Donald Trump for that.
And how do you get rid of that?
You get rid of the man, maybe, but not the problem.
Can you not argue that's what I was going to say on Adam's point, that it is Donald Trump
that has led the precedent for picking away at the fabric of democratic institutions in the
US, and one could argue that what does the US stand for, if not for its democracy, its justice
system, its courts?
If we take the line of questioning that we hear a lot, we've been hearing a lot of the last 90 minutes actually on this network,
of this idea of sham trials, kangaroo courts, you know, you hear it again and again.
Does that mean that the US justice system just doesn't work?
I don't think it doesn't work.
And actually what you're going to see here, like a sort of giant monster slowly masticating, it will run its course.
And nobody knows actually what's going to happen on what the implications are for the primaries or the 2024 presidential election.
The American justice system is much more negotiable and provisible.
than the system in this country or in France.
You know, you've got individual states with different laws.
You've got federal crimes at massive level.
And, you know, just remember, how did they bring Al Capone to justice?
They didn't do him for being a gangster.
They did him on tax evasion.
I mean, that's how American justice works.
But, Adam, why this matters is today at the same time
and not making the headlines in the way Donald Trump is,
we just saw Finland enter NATO.
We've just got 800 more miles of border with Russia.
actually what happens in America has direct implications for the geopolitics in the world.
And at the moment, our freest democracy, our strongest military power on the planet is severely compromised.
Well, hang on, we might be better off talking about that.
I agree with you it's more important than the fate of Donald Trump.
But they bleed into each of.
However, the fact that NATO has expanded along the Russian border is a massive V sign to Donald Trump,
who tried to hollow out NATO and, as we know, thought that President Putin was a junior.
And don't forget, he could come back.
as president in 24. And it will affect us, of course, if Donald Trump, and that's why we're
talking about it. Hereon, talk to you. I know you might be watching us from your sitting room in
Manchester this evening, thinking not more Trump, for God's sake, there's else going on in the United
Kingdom. But he is the leader, once was the leader of what's called the free world. If he does again,
of course, the implications ripple around the world as Tessa and Adam just laid out. I want to talk a little
bit about the historical context of this as well, because Donald Trump first US president to face
criminal charges, as we pointed out, impeached twice before. But this criminal charges thing,
there he is in court this afternoon, slumped over the desk. They're looking like any other ordinary
citizen pretty much in the dock, if we can call it that behind the table. But he's not...
I think that's the first time he's been called on. He's not the first world leader that's ever faced
criminal charges, of course. Francis Nicholas Sarkozy,
was done on corruption.
South Korea's Park Kun Hui,
also done on corruption as well.
And of course, Berlusconi, the Bunga Bunga Boy,
he's been bouncing in and out of the courts for decades.
Different fates awaited all of those people,
different penalties, political suspension, etc.
But I think what is key here, what stands out for Trump,
is can he bounce back from arrest,
even though he's not wearing handcuffs,
but from this picture where we're seeing this afternoon in the courthouse,
straight back to the White House in 2024?
Well, let us not forget, Boris Johnson,
who's not in the court.
at the moment, but he is being pursued by the Privileges Committee of the House of Commons,
which could end his political career. So we're not exactly exempt from this.
Not immune, no.
But that's what's interesting. Let's not forget when he was first impeached. He was impeached twice,
of course. That was about a then-unknown Ukrainian president who he was trying to arm twist
into doing dirty work against Biden in order for him to get a multi-million pound deal to shore him
up in the Dombas. That wasn't convicted. And that means
that he can still stand for high office.
You know, I look back and I think, if only on that case.
The moment of truth for Donald Trump,
I was there in Washington, D.C.
was the second impeachment trial in the Senate,
where the Senate was clearly wobbling
on whether to impeach him or not.
And in the end, the Republican Party decided
that in their own interests of re-election fundraising,
they would let him off after January 6th.
That was the moment.
And since then, Trump has...
carried on with his show.
He could have been finished off then.
If he had been convicted by the Senate,
that would have disqualified him from running from officers.
It's quite extraordinary his power, isn't it?
It really is.
And I think that's important context as well.
And what he does with this as well,
because whatever happens, Trump obviously takes control of that narrative.
We've seen it happen today.
Let's bring in a view from states.
Join me as lawyer, Alan Dershowitz,
who has written the book, Get Trump,
the threat to civil liberties, due process,
now constitutional rule of law.
Alan, so great to speak to you.
Just give us.
your sense of what we're seeing today.
Is it politically motivated, witch hunt?
Oh, there's no question.
It's politically motivated.
I don't think there's a single honest person
who could pass a lie detector test
and say that a district attorney in Manhattan
would indict anybody but Donald Trump
on these flimsy, flimsy charges.
We haven't seen the indictment.
They may have a picture of him,
a videotape of him shooting somebody on Fifth Avenue.
But that seems doubtful.
It seems likely that this case surrounds
payment of hush money, never in history has anybody paid hush money, and then disclosed it on a
public corporate form. So this is a made-up case. The man ran for district attorney as a Democrat
on the promise to get Trump. He decided not to go after him, that he got tremendous political
pressure. People in his office quit. Editorials were written against him. His reelection was in danger,
and so he decided to get Trump. So we looked through all the statute books to try to find something.
He couldn't find it. So we made a problem.
a misdemeanor state to a federal
you don't know.
They may have him on some economic
charges, but it's a political
trial, of course.
Alan, I understand the arguments for it being a political
trial. I understand the way
Brigg was voted in and that it's in Manhattan
and New York and the rest of it.
But saying that it's a made-up
offense or a made-up trial,
isn't that enormous allegation in itself?
If it's
about the, what I said is
I haven't seen the indictment. But if it's
about failure to make a public disclosure in a corporate form about a hush money payment that
you've made, it's made up. If it's based on a federal campaign contribution law, which the
federal governments refuse to prosecute, it's made up. Look, if they get him for undervaluating
the 40 Broadway or overvaluating it, that's a different matter. Maybe they'll have something
there, but they'd have to go after virtually every major real estate operator in New York.
I have no doubt, even before seeing the indictment, unless there's a major surprise that no one
else but Donald Trump would have been indicted. And the best proof of this is that the predecessor
in the DA's office didn't indict him, and he didn't think he should be indicted. Nothing's changed.
There's no new evidence as far as we know. There's no new law. What's changed other than the
political pressure? So I think the concept of a.
made up crime is an accurate one.
Again, I have an open mind.
If there is new evidence of a traumatic
violation of law, I'd favor,
I'd favor prosecution.
I'd favor prosecution of anybody
who has committed a crime that other people
are regularly prosecuted for.
No one is above the law, but no one is below the law.
Yeah, I mean, arguably it's not the strongest
misdemeanor in Trump's war cabinet.
I'd agree with you there.
There is actually a porn star out there,
Stormy Daniels, who says this did happen.
We await further details of the 34 counts, as you said.
But there was some sort of misbehavior here.
Of course, there's been plenty more.
There's been plenty more in Trump's presidency.
Do you not think that the American public just deserve better?
Isn't it better just to see someone serve justice?
Sure.
And that's why I vote against him twice, and I'll vote against him a third time.
I don't like his conduct.
I don't like his misbehavior.
He did wrong things, paying hush money,
my view is wrong. Those are not crimes. Except, except. I mean, his attorney already served a prison
term for paying hush money. So if it was wrong for him, it could be wrong for Donald Trump,
couldn't it? Oh, please don't say that. His attorney served a prison term for pleading guilty to what
the prosecutor has told him to plead guilty to. Let me tell you how it works. I've been doing this
for 60 years. They got Michael Cohn.
on previous matters relating to cheating on taxes.
He could have gone to jail for 20 years,
and they said to him, we'll make a deal.
You plead guilty to a co-conspiracy with Donald Trump,
and then we'll let you off on a relatively minor charge.
So that's why it's inadmissible in court
that Cohen pleaded guilty to a conspiracy with Donald Trump.
Yeah, but all my point is,
is you're saying there's no possible crime here.
I'm saying there was a crime in that case.
and that could transfer.
I just want to interrupt both of you
because we do have a picture of Donald Trump
standing outside court.
This is a breaking picture.
Let's take a look.
The latest image, of course, all images.
There we go, raising his fist.
In fact, that's outside Trump Tower.
I've just been told this was just outside Trump Tower.
That was on his way to court earlier on today.
We'll bring you more pictures as we get them
throughout the next hour
because we do expect Mr. Trump to be leaving court very soon.
Do stand by.
We're going to be having plenty of.
more conversation about all this throughout the next hour. It's going to be a very fluid,
flexible breaking hour. We've got Tessie. We've got Adam in the studio. We thank Alan Dershowitz
for his contribution just now. Next tonight, historic day. That's for certain. But Donald Trump,
really the victim of politically motivated witch hunt, as he claims, will continue debating it next.
Welcome back to Pierce Morgan, uncensored. That's me, Rosanna Lockwood, in for Pierce. He's on
holiday for a few days of what is he missing? Look at this. Donald Trump sitting in court in
Lower Manhattan Courthouse. Of course, Peters is going to be looking at this from his
Sunlanger on his phone. Sure, watching this show right now. Hi, Peir's. So is it a witch hunt
or is Trump facing justice? We are going to continue this conversation joined in the studio by
Dr Tessa Dunlop and Mr Adam Bolton and down the line here by Joe Borrelli, the co-chair of Donald
Trump's New York campaign. Let's start with you, Joe. You've had a big insight, obviously,
into the workings of the Trump campaign. No surprises there. But talk about.
to us a little bit about what's happening today.
I'm sure you've got some strong views,
but I'm particularly interested in the way
that the Trump campaign is working with the narrative here.
Well, it's not even working with the narrative.
It is fundamentally the narrative of who Alvin Bragg is.
This is someone who ran for office to be a prosecutor
by telling voters he's not going to prosecute.
As a matter of fact, his pitch to the voters
was to prosecute as few felonies as possible
and to minimize most crimes.
to misdemeanors or outright dismiss them.
He's made good on those promises, by the way.
We've seen record numbers of dismissals,
both for misdemeanors and felonies.
So he's doing that.
The only person he promised to prosecute
on the campaign trail was Donald Trump.
That is unique in American district attorneys.
That's unique in American prosecution of crimes.
That is not something that's the norm.
And it should really chill a lot of people to the core
that there are prosecutors who would act like that.
And now that we're seeing the details,
This is a crime that most prosecutors, including Bragg himself around the country, have declined to prosecute.
This is not something that would even normally rise to the level of a crime.
Look, Joe, I'm going to ask you the same thing.
I asked Adam Dershowitz, Alan Dershowitz, rather, about five minutes ago, which is this, is this not, you know, a prosecutor making something up, making up a crime, making up a misdemeanor, sham trial.
These are the words that we keep hearing.
surely not in the United States of America in 2023.
Is that really what you're alleging?
Well, I mean, think about what is the heart of the issue, right?
This is someone who paid a settlement to a woman to save his family from embarrassment.
That is something which is identical to what Bill Clinton has done.
That is something identical to what a lot of people do under the advice of their counsel
while they're settling some sort of legal disagreement.
So again, this was done with a court case, a civil case,
in mind under the advice of counsel. That's why it's so bizarre that now they're
finding reasons to charge the former president with a crime. But the prosecution
clearly think that they have enough evidence to go forward. They think they
have enough evidence because they pulled a jury, a grand jury first and now
potentially a criminal jury in New York County, which is Manhattan, which some
areas of Manhattan, 1% of people voted for Donald Trump. If you're part of the
jury that convicts Donald Trump, you probably wouldn't pay for a drink at any bar in Manhattan
given how progressive and how liberal it is. That's why you hear rumors of Trump trying to change
the venue for this trial to another county, where I live in Staten Island, for example,
or perhaps somewhere else where at least maybe half the people might have voted for him.
That's just how the system works, though, isn't it? That's how the justice system works.
Grand jury, the members of the public, maybe he got unlucky in the district here.
Do you think it would have made that much of a difference if he'd got it,
move to Staten Island as he'd hoped?
Well, he still can.
So they couldn't move the grand jury proceeding that happened already, but now they possibly
can move the trial.
And they probably can make a very strong case that this jury pool might be tainted.
This is somewhere where Manhattan is arguably the most progressive, most liberal place
in the United States of America, not just the state of New York or the city of New York.
So I think there's a fair case to be had in that respect.
Joe, I'm joined.
It's also why Donald Trump's been trying to, you know, all his life to break into Manhattan.
He's made his fortune such that it is in Manhattan.
He lives in Manhattan.
Therefore, he's just being tried by his peers, isn't he?
Well, he doesn't live in Manhattan.
Well, he doesn't anymore.
He moved when he left the White House prior to that.
He was a New York and Manhattan resident, right?
So he's being tried by his peers.
If they don't like him, it's not.
Joe, why?
Yeah, I mean, I think this is a unique scenario, though,
where most people who are put on trial anywhere in the country
don't have a public opinion poll about them
or in this case, an actual election,
where the majority of people have a prejudicial view
against who he might be.
And that could be for or against.
There's a fair argument to be had in some counties, I imagine,
that voted all well-demy.
That's an argument saying you couldn't put him on trial anywhere
because everyone knows who he is
and they have an opinion. It's ludicrous.
No, it's an argument that because we have that Trump is above the law.
But what I want to ask you, Joe, you look like a youngish man.
And there you are basically lampooning the judicial system upon which your country is structured and built.
And I wonder, how you go forward from this?
Eventually, Trump will be history, whatever happens.
And how do you rebuild credibility in the American system to give not only you faith,
but to be the beacon across the rest of the world as you once were?
Well, I mean, to give you a bit of background, I mean, the criminal justice system under Alvin Bragg has
long been the subject of criticism. And if there's an embarrassment in the process, even before
this Trump indictment, we even saw smoke from this particular incident, it's been Alvin Bragg.
Again, he's the only prosecutor. So the problem is, the problem isn't America. The problem is
just one district attorney. That's what you're saying. So when there's future criminal charges
the fight Trump on the bottom. We're talking about the Trump case. And in this case, we're talking about
the one prosecutor in all of America. Right. We have progressive prosecutors, even in the city.
Just one. Just one, then. We'll hold you to that when the small criminal charges before it.
Only one prosecutor has ever on day one of his job put out a memo to his staff saying that we're no longer going to prosecute most felonies and misdemeanors.
We are going to seek to downgrade all crimes. If you know of another prosecutor who has put a memo on writing to his staff saying that, that I challenge you to name them.
Well, I would put it to you that prosecutors quite often state their priorities and they quite often,
change when you have a change of who the district attorney is.
And so in that sense, it's not unusual.
Joe, before we move on and bring in another voice on this,
I just want to ask you a little bit about what we might expect in the coming days,
given that you've been so closely associated with the Trump campaign.
We do expect Donald Trump to deliver some remarks at Mar-a-Lago when he lands back there later this evening.
Just give us a sense of how you think he's going to play it from here.
I think there won't be too many surprises.
I think we've already saw some of the signaling coming from his legal team that they think this is an unfair prosecution.
By the way, there are federal election commission violations given to members of Congress all over New York City in the past few years.
There's state election law violations that have been given to politicians across New York City over the years.
Not one has ever been investigated by Alvin Bragg.
So just to go back to that earlier point.
But I think we'll hear a lot more from the president himself talking about how this is a witch.
Trump, how he was targeted before this person was even elected to office, and how no one has
been charged with a crime for doing similar behavior in the past.
Joe, have you donated to his campaign trail?
Were you one of the 25 new donors?
Apparently, 25% of those donations that poured in this weekend were from newbies.
Were you one of them?
No, I haven't even endorsed him yet for 2024.
I mean, let's be frank.
I was a co-chair of the 2020 and 2016 campaign.
So I am not someone coming here as a paid representative or any way a donor of Donald Trump
in this election cycle.
Let's thank Joe Borelli for giving us your inside track on this
and bring in now investigative journalist and author David K. Johnson.
David, I don't know if you were listening to that conversation there.
I know you've got a slightly different view on things today.
Just tell us what this means for America.
Well, I think this actually is a revival of the American promise of equal justice for all.
Trump's a private citizen.
He's not the president of the United States.
He's a private citizen.
The district attorney has brought 34 charges.
As I predicted, it would be a fabric of charges, not a single thread.
And I just heard Mr. Borrelli say, no one else, but Donald Trump, we charged this.
Really?
Excuse me, Michael Cohen went to prison for this.
People get charged with these crimes.
Now, if he doesn't like the legislature's writing of the criminal statutes, he should be lobbying to replace those.
legislators. This is when you strip away the political nonsense that's being raised. This is the
ordinary prosecution of someone who is accused of violating a host of federal criminal laws.
And people should understand that Donald Trump has been getting away with stuff for years.
As a casino owner, he had 12, 13, and 14-year-old children who he plied with liquor,
limousines, and hotel rooms because they had money to gamble.
We're going to talk about a 19-year-old who poses as 21, a 6th grader, a 12-year-old, a 13-year-old, a 14-year-old.
Donald spent years involved up to his eyeballs with a major international cocaine trafficker, for whom he did extraordinary favors.
And everything I've said, we'll say on the show comes from public records.
We've got live pictures of Donald Trump leaving the lower Manhattan courthouse.
These are the latest pictures, not live.
latest pictures of Mr. Trump leaving the lower Manhattan courthouse there.
Obviously, it's surrounded by quite a few members of security and the rest of it.
We'll keep bringing these live pictures as and when we get them.
And we're expecting, you know, we haven't seen many protests today in the sort of the likeness of Capital Six riots, for example.
We saw quite a lot of hubbub and calamity around Marjorie Taylor Green's protest earlier.
But around the courthouse, they've managed to keep quite a tight ring of security, as you can.
can see here. We didn't see much of Trump actually heading into the courthouse. As we showed you
the picture earlier, we saw him leaving Trump Tower this afternoon. I think everyone's just checking
here to see, you know, does he look guilty? Does he look sad? Does he look angry? Does he
look defiant? Is he wearing handcuffs? You could just make out the top of his blonde hair there
as he makes his way into the car. There'll be plenty of analysis on this, on these pictures,
on these types of video as well. We will be heading to a break. We want to thank David K. Johnson
for joining us. They'll be back with our
in-studio guests after the break for plenty
more analysis and debate on this.
Welcome back. Pierce Morgan An censored.
Pierce, away for a few days.
Rosanna Lockwood in the studio for you.
We'll earn we have more on this historic day
trouble pleading not guilty to 34 counts
of falsifying business records relating
to hush money payments, allegedly
paid to Stormy Daniels.
Now, we're showing you the pictures
here, the latest pictures. This is the
motorcade, nice aerial shot there for you.
Us newsbods love this type of thing.
You're seeing Trump leaving the lower Manhattan courthouse here with his security in this car.
He's heading back to his own plane.
Trump, fourth one.
He's going to be flying down to Mar-a-Lago this evening.
Where he's expected to make remarks in front of, it's probably fair to say, his supporters down there in Mar-a-Lago in Florida as well.
So we are going to continue the debate here in the studio.
These are live pictures we're now showing you.
This is the Motorcade, the Trump Motiketka, make its way quite freely through Manhattan.
They're making its way.
they hit the bridge, will they hit the tunnel?
Who knows?
They're probably just heading to an airstrip,
heading to a helicopter.
They're going to head off down south to Mara Alago.
This is the 45th American president, of course.
He's been in court today, facing some 34 charges.
Again, we've been quite keen to point out.
Detail on these charges has been somewhat scant leading up to today.
A lot of people have been jumping to conclusions in a lot of different directions.
We have had some sources giving us details on what they expect, of course, as well.
This contains.
But, of course, we've been hearing it described,
as a politically motivated witch hunt.
That is, is it the Democrats winning today?
Seeing Trump in court being tried like any other ordinary citizen,
or are they shooting themselves in the foot long term?
We've had some fascinating voices on the show already talking to us about this.
Somebody who was with Trump's campaign, Joe Borelli,
we've heard from an investigative journalist as well
who said this is certainly not a witch hunt.
And there really are some broader questions here
about what this means for America's justice system.
The district attorney in this Alvin Bragg,
expecting him to speak very shortly as we show you these live pictures of Donald Trump and his
motorcade heading down the highway there in Manhattan. There hasn't been that much sort of ruckus
today, much disruption. I'm going to bring in the panel we've got here in the studio on this as
well, joined by Dr. Tessa Dunlop, Adam Bolton and Esther Krakow. Also joining us looking
resplendent in yellow. Thanks for three of you. Let's just talk about the media circus then,
Tessa. I know you've got some views on this. And what it really means when we consider
how we consume this type of news.
It is extraordinary.
I feel sort of unclean because I know so much now about Donald Trump.
I even know he applies his own makeup, which explains a lot, by the way,
and that a man carries a hairspray canister who walks behind him.
It's like you point a camera at something and we gather, we watch, we talk, we speculate,
we build.
Do we build back Trump bigger as a result?
To what extent are we actually, I say we're obviously in Britain,
but the whole world is playing this game.
massive distraction, and we know who the winners are, by the way, the non-democratic countries
that we've really got a crisis with. So I do think we have to do a bit of self-examination
about the way in which we prioritise stories like this. Esther, I'll come to you because
we haven't heard from you yet on this show. Have you been glued to the TV today? Have you
watched this? Do you care? Do you think Brits should care?
I have not been glued to the TV, mainly because I'm sad. I don't think this is a very
positive development for America. I don't think America is going to be a better country
because now we've made, you know, I suppose, targeting your political opponents fair,
in this way and politicizing the judicial system to do that.
So that's mainly been why I've been avoiding it.
I also think this is a particularly weak case.
I mean, there are actually two stronger cases against Trump,
which I think probably have more teeth.
This is clearly the weakest one.
The former DA didn't even want to take this up,
so it's clear that the current Manhattan DA is just doing this
to make a name for himself, which is fair enough.
Anyone attached to anything that brings down Trump will always be a celebrity.
I feel like this is many people's wet dream, though.
It comes to life, you know, seeing Trump the potential of him being in handcuffs.
and his mugshot and all of that.
But I think we have to understand the broader implications.
And is America better for this?
I don't think so.
Now you're probably going to see allegations against Biden
and any other political opponent, really.
And we are sitting here, as Tesla pointed out,
giving it air time for yet another hour.
Adam, from your point of view, as a journalist
that's done this kind of thing for many, many years.
We've given it too much airtime?
Well, we already are seeing allegations being made against Biden
and Hunter Biden, his son.
And you're right that ever since possibly
the impeachment of Bill Clinton, the American justice has got increasingly politicized.
But to a certain extent, that's how they do things. And I would say that possibly what we're seeing
today is quite healthy because it is at least saying Donald Trump, former president, isn't above
the law. Now, maybe this case is not found against him. But as you know, there are other cases
in Georgia are over asking for 11,000 votes. Well, there's evidence of that. And, you know, this just may be
the way things work in America.
It is very political.
Judges are elected,
but you've got the stopgaps of juries,
of the grand jury,
and then if there's a criminal child,
a jury there,
it's rough.
Is that really a stopgrap,
because for someone as politically
in sin jury as Donald Trump,
everyone has an opinion on him.
You know, they used to argue that they should actually...
You don't believe in the jury service.
No, but the thing is,
there was an argument to actually move it outside of Manhattan
to maybe Staten Island just because,
because clearly Manhattan is very...
I mean, this...
This to a certain extent is what the electors of the district attorney want to see.
They want to see an attempt to bring someone who they regard as a crook,
and we just heard from David K. Johnson, widespread allegations.
They want to test that and bring it to justice.
He's got a perfectly fair legal system.
But in a way, Adam, the problem is the sort of Q&on leaders and the oathswearers
and those who rushed up against the capital,
people genuinely believe in the disinformation that the system's against them, against their man.
And I want to know that there's a corruption of the idea of an American democratic system.
People sue each other over banging into each other on the ski slopes.
Again, it's a nation underlaw.
This has taken it to a whole new level, the current politicisation, the polarisation.
And the system ultimately will work it out.
Come on, in your lifetime you've never seen anything.
No, I've never seen anything like Donald Trump.
I think that's where none of us have ever seen anyone like Donald Trump,
but I think our next guest from the US is really going to give us something more to consider.
This is Mark Burns.
Here's Trump's spiritual advisor, Mark.
I believe you are joining us from down the line.
Florida, you're a very close eight to Mr. Trump.
I know this.
Are you expecting to be there at Mara Lago by his side this evening when he delivers those remarks?
Absolutely.
Heading there right now as we speak.
Again, this is most deafling a witch heart.
I mean, this is unprecedented, has never happened in the history of the United States of America.
This is not a prosecution of Donald J. Trump.
This is clearly a persecution for election interference at the highest category.
And so the DA's office should be extremely ashamed of themselves for politicizing this and really, you know, tying up the hands of the justice system in America.
Americans are fed up.
they see themselves in Donald J. Trump.
That's why his polls are shooting up even higher.
That's why he raised over $7 million in 24 hours
because the American people aren't fooled by this witch hunt by the DA.
Mark, I think some Americans see themselves in Donald Trump,
but clearly some do not.
And I just want to pick up one of our guests, Esther's point,
about this being a sad day, a sad day for the U.S.
Now, you may think of it in a different way,
but internationally, when we look at this,
We do wonder, some of us do wonder, is it a sad day for America to see a former president in this position,
but also to see the justice system being picked apart and criticized like this?
Well, absolutely. This is an extremely sad day for the American history.
This is a stain, a black eye on the history of the United States of America.
And again, President Grant, who was arrested for speeding in his horse buggy, right?
Those charges were later dropped.
This has never happened in the history of the United States of America.
I mean, listen, the U.S. the DA in Manhattan has clearly having vendetta against Donald Day Trump.
The media has found Donald J. Trump guilty back in 2015 the moment he came down the golden escalator
and announced his candidacy for President of the United States of America.
It was that day he became guilty of some charge at the Manhattan DA,
pain on the goal to ultimately find Donald J. Trump guilty of something.
This is a far as, this is literally has poured gasoline on an already lit and fire.
And American people are even more outraged and supportive of Donald Trump.
Mark, I don't think you could argue, though, that we haven't.
News channels around the world, debate as pundits around the world, haven't given it
some debate, some argument from both sides of the aisle.
as a man of faith, can you understand the other side of this argument?
Well, I mean, clearly, you know, the Bible says very clear that he the sun set free is free indeed.
We're talking about, if we're looking at this from a spiritual point of view,
we're talking about an action, a sin that happened years and years ago in which I know
Donald Trump has repented from.
The Bible also says, thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt bear false witness, doesn't it?
has completely healed him and completely forgiven him from those things.
The same God that healed you, my friend, whoever you are, the same God.
I think Trump's done so well to avoid conviction until this point.
We all need you praying on our side.
That's what I want.
I want to get a mark over here.
Let's wrap up on these smiles.
Amen to some smiles today.
Let's say that.
Mark Burns, thanks very much.
We wish you all the best to see me down there in Mar-a-Lago.
We're going to continue this debate.
so much more in this historical day in America.
Coming up next with our panellists in the studio, Esther Adam and Tessa as well.
And there we go.
We're going to close out with these live shots as we're heading into the break of Donald Trump's motorcade heading towards his lane.
Welcome back to Piers Morgan Ansed.
Soon it's Rosanna Lockwood in for Piers the next few days.
Bring you back with these live pictures from Manhattan, Trump's Motorcade.
They're heading towards Trump Force One.
He's going to fly back to Mar-a-Lago after having faced these charges.
arraigned in court in Manhattan's lower district this afternoon.
When I bring these live pictures from inside the district attorney's office or the press room,
indeed for Alvin Bragg, the Democrat elected DA, who has been so much talked about in the lead up to today, of course,
given the charges that he has bought against Trump, given that he has somewhat, some would argue,
campaigned on getting Trump.
And now he's got them, we were expecting these comments from Alvin Bragg in the last 15 minutes.
They haven't arrived yet, so we might get them.
In the next 15 minutes, if you're lucky, before we hand over to the talk.
As ever, it's a very fluid and moving situation here in the studio.
Nothing has gone as we thought it would, but it's been so much fun and so interesting to hear all the different sides of the debate.
We hope you've enjoyed it so far.
We're now going to continue that.
We're joined by Talk TV contributor Paula Rene Adrian, political journalist Ava Santina,
and former special advisor to Boris Johnson, Alex Crowley.
Thank you both so much.
Former BBC journalist Laura Trevelyan also joining us too, down the line.
I believe you're in New York, Law.
And I know that we were going to bring you on to talk about slavery reparations.
We also said on Twitter that's what we're going to talk about this show.
We will have to talk about that another time.
But obviously, some of our viewers might recognise your name from this story at the moment.
However, you're a former BBC journalist.
You are in New York.
Give us your sense of what's happened today.
And what's it been like being there?
Well, Rosanna, it's pretty extraordinary.
Not since 1872 when President Grant was arrested by police for speeding
and his horse-drawn buggy has an American president had a brush with the law in this way.
And I tell you that the scene in Lower Manhattan, which is just a couple of miles away from where I'm talking to you, has been absolutely extraordinary.
So much security, road closures around the court, as you would expect, a real circus atmosphere.
And this, of course, is President Trump's hometown.
This is where he grew up, New York City.
It's where he became famous.
It's where he's known, was known as the playboy, the man who was about town clubbing.
And this is not, as you know, a city where he's politically in favour at all.
It's a city that he has a love, hate relationship with.
And it's the city where he appears this morning, this afternoon,
and just this extraordinary scene.
But I think what I would say is that these are the least of his troubles when it comes to the law.
Far more serious, if he's indicted, will be the federal investigation into his role.
in attempting to allegedly overturn the 2020 election.
And also that separate investigation in Georgia,
President Trump on tape saying,
find me the 11,700 votes that I need to win this state from Joe Biden.
Those are the much more serious charges, I think.
But this is very New York, very tawdry,
there he is, accused of falsifying business records
over hushed payments to a porn star.
And it was the city that made Donald Trump as well.
Before we head to the panel in the studio,
just want to ask you, Laura,
as a real sort of journalist voice as well.
Most of your career at the BBC are broadcaster.
Do you think it's right that we're giving us so much airtime in the UK?
Absolutely.
I mean, this is hugely significant and probably just the beginning of a process.
This is accountability.
This is the rule of law.
This is a former president being brought to account.
Now, many people in America have doubts about these charges.
This is consensual sex, essentially, with Stormy Daniels.
But he is accused of being in.
involved in a hush money payment during the 2016 campaigns.
So she wouldn't talk about it in the closing days of the campaign.
So yes, it's very significant.
What if she had talked about the affair?
Would it have made a difference?
I mean, probably not.
But yes, it's enormously significant.
This is a man who, if he were elected president again,
would he withdraw America from NATO?
Would he be supporting Ukraine in its war against Russia in the way that Joe Biden is?
No, certainly not.
Donald Trump is someone who wanted to shake up the world order.
So yes, it's hugely significant that you should be talking in Britain
about the fact that here he is facing the rule of law.
Laura Trevelli and speaking to us live from New York.
Thanks so much, Laura, for bringing us the view from the ground.
We're going to return back to our studio panellists now.
And as we're showing you, again, these live pictures are from New York.
You've got helicopters circling.
You've got all sorts watching Donald Trump tracking his every move
as he makes his way back to Mara Lago.
It's such a shame that we can't bring you his live remarks from Mara Lago.
But don't you worry, there's plenty of dissection across them across the shows.
tomorrow. Let's come back to the studio now, though. Turn to Paula, turn to Ava, turn to Alex.
Our pack here on the Piers Morgan Show, great to see you all. And we've got a legal mind,
we've got political minds as well. Let's start with them legal mind, Paula.
We've been speaking, I don't know if you saw our previous guest, talking about, you know,
the US Constitution, what this means about picking apart US democracy and the justice system.
What's your view? Isn't this so important, though, for it to happen, bearing in mind
the Capitol Hill riots and the loss of life.
lives and not only the deaths, but also the impact that it had on the people, the families,
the communities, it's got to happen. We've got to see this. And can I just say, what I do
not understand as a British person looking across the water, why are you paying him $47 for a
T-shirt? Why? I've got something coming in my ear, Paula, producers telling me that Trump has not
been issued with a gagging order when it comes to this case. Obviously, we know he likes to talk
and we'll come maybe back to Alex on this on the communication side of things. But to what extent
do you think that changes things and how this court case is going to be dragged out? Well, I don't
think it changes things at all. I think it's a very sensible thing. If you would have gagged him,
then all you would have done is feed the frenzy of conspiracy that his followers so need to survive.
If you allow him to talk, I suspect he will probably talk himself into a situation.
that he can't talk himself out of.
Alex, would you agree with that?
And how would you, if you were in Trump's campaign team,
sorry to put you in that position,
but how would you be dealing with this?
Trump will be loving this.
This is perfect for Trump.
What does he want?
He wants attention.
He wants the world's media looking at him,
speculating on his every single move.
The worst thing that could happen to Donald Trump
from a political perspective is nobody talking about him.
So this is great.
And yes, the charges are serious
and some of the charges potentially to follow.
series. But from a purely political campaign perspective, this is great. Because his great
strength is drowning out the airwaves so that none of his other opponents can get a word in.
This is fantastic for him. What the establishment in America who oppose him need to just
try and understand is that if they want to beat him, they need to take the attention away from
him, not put more on him. In terms of how he might drag this out, though, could you see an argument
for that from a sort of political campaigns and communications point of view to really keep,
even if it means he is literally campaigning from a prison cell, if that's what it takes.
I think he would love that.
I think that he would consider that to be a campaign advantage to be able to say that.
We've seen the T-shirt.
We've seen the T-shirt.
We've seen the T-shirt.
And I'm sure his campaign team are thinking, actually, we'd love a picture of him in a cell,
because that would get his supporters even more, rather.
Ava.
Yeah, I mean, I couldn't agree more.
looking like a martyr is so helpful to his campaign.
I mean, he's steaming ahead now in the polls,
which is just almost farcical.
It's quite laughable.
And there was actually a fascinating little tip bit
in Rolling Stone yesterday.
They reported that he actually had the option
to appear via Zoom Link.
And he came in person because he loves the spectacle.
But, you know, if you were in the Democrats at the moment,
I think that Joe Biden is actually taking the wrong approach.
He's actually been out today touring a factory,
which is almost hilarious because no one is watching that.
No one is looking.
But he has done the right thing by not talking about Trump
and not giving him any oxygen,
because that is exactly what his supporters are craving.
If you were in charge of the Democrat campaigns team,
what would you be suggesting that they do
in order to change the direction which this is going?
Because it feels like Donald Trump and his team
have rested control of the narrative.
I would look to Asa Hutchinson,
who launched his bid for the Republican nomination,
and it was completely drowned out.
No one looked at it because everyone was looking at Trump
heading to court or preparing to go.
to court. And I would say, do nothing, be silent and don't engage, don't feed, don't give him
oxygen. Now, there's someone in all of this that hasn't actually been mentioned much whilst we've
been talking about the US Constitution and everything else. And that is Stormy Daniels, who's the
women at the centre of it. And she's been somewhat vocal on Twitter the last few weeks.
And sometimes she's sort of quite, and that is really what is at the centre of this. I know some
say it's not the most lethal of the misdemeanors in Trump's war chest. And we could have got him on so
much more. But just from a behaviour point of view, from a lack of statesman point of view,
do you think this is being lost? Paula? I am glad, and I'm going to refer to her as Stephanie,
because that's who she is. The whole fact that we're talking about her as stormy is, again,
this kind of message that he wanted to get across about this woman who is a mother, who is a wife,
who is somebody who was put in a position where she had little choice. So Stephanie, as far as I'm
concerned is brave. She is courageous and I am glad and I think quite ironic, bear in mind how
religious he is and a lot of his followers are, that it is Mary Magdalene who potentially could have
the last say in this. Let's talk to then Alex about that because I think that's a really strong
point you made, Paula, about the woman at the centre of this. But we were hearing from some of our
guests on the show earlier that, you know, if you look at other Democrats, you see there's been
cover-ups. Let's talk about Bill Clinton. Let's talk about, you know, what happened with Monica
Lewinsky as well. It almost feels like in order to be president of the United States,
there's got to be stuff in the locker. But I think to most American voters,
they will think that the situation of a president or a presidential candidate paying hush money
to a woman who they feel might embarrass them for obvious reasons is a fairly normal state
of affairs. But there is a kind of double standard here, isn't there in America?
When it's Bill Clinton, Bill Clinton's still a saint.
He's still the democratic kind of god that sits there that can do no wrong.
But when it's Donald Trump that does exactly the same thing, or more or less a comparable thing, he's the guy in the gutter.
They've got to work this out.
Ava, do you think it's at all similar to British politics?
Yes, extraordinary parallels.
I mean, Trump's Stormy or Stephanie, I suppose is Boris Johnson's Jennifer R. Curie.
Look, I want to thank you all.
there, Ava, Alex, in the studio, all of the guests, all the panelists who've had for the last out,
it's been great having you with us.
Rosanna Lockwood, in for Piers Morgan, uncensored.
That is it for me.
Whatever you do tonight, make sure it's uncensored.
Good night.
