The NPR Politics Podcast - Trump Sentenced: No Jail Time, No Fine

Episode Date: January 10, 2025

President-elect Donald Trump was sentenced today in his New York hush money case. While there weren't any real consequences, he does walk away a convicted felon. Then, what is the "election integrity"... movement. This episode: White House correspondent Asma Khalid, voting correspondent Miles Parks, justice correspondent Carrie Johnson, and senior political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.The podcast is produced by Bria Suggs & Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 My name is Sam Bugler and I'm with a group from Drake University in Washington DC and we are currently standing outside of the Supreme Court waiting to hopefully hear the oral arguments against the TikTok ban. It is 9-11 and we have been waiting here for an hour and a half, but this podcast was recorded at 12.38 PM on Friday, January 10th of 2025. Things may have changed by the time you hear this. Now enjoy the show. That poor cold soul had to stand outside for a long time.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Hopefully they got in. Yeah. And it's gonna be really interesting oral arguments. I mean, there's been a real decline in the number of people who are saying that they think that TikTok should be banned and more young people actually getting their news from TikTok. So it's gonna be a big change. All right. Well, hey there. It is the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Asma Khalid. I cover the White House. I'm Carrie Johnson. I cover the Justice Department. And I'm Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent.
Starting point is 00:01:03 And today on our weekly roundup, we are going to start the show with news that this morning president-elect Donald Trump was sentenced in that New York hush money case. Yes, thank you, Your Honor. This has been a very terrible experience. I think it's been a tremendous setback for New York and the New York court system. Trump did not receive any punishment and he will not spend any time in jail. But the sentencing itself is symbolic. We are just 10 days away from seeing Trump take the oath of office to reenter the White
Starting point is 00:01:35 House and this marks the first time that any former current or future president has been tried on criminal charges. Keri, what did the judge exactly rule this morning? Judge Juan Marchand in New York basically sentenced Trump to nothing. No requirement to report to the probation office, no incarceration, no financial fines. But Trump walks away a convicted felon and know, has faced justice at the hands of a jury of New Yorkers, as he once was. People who convicted him last year of 34 criminal charges as part of this hush money scheme to cover up his alleged affair with Stormy Daniels before
Starting point is 00:02:19 the 2016 election rolled around. And so that is a verdict for history, although Trump will be appealing, he said today, and he will be appealing, I guess, from his perch in the White House. And he can legally do that. Absolutely. It's his right to appeal, and some people think he may actually have a good chance. Trump is arguing a couple of things. One is that it was an undue burden for him to have to deal with this while he was preparing to reenter the White House in his transition. And the second was that the New York jury who convicted him last year, those jurors heard evidence that should have been out of bounds because presidents have some immunity, the Supreme
Starting point is 00:03:01 Court told us. They have some immunity for their official acts. And even though the heart of this scheme in which Trump was convicted for these hush money payments happened before Trump took office in 2016, the jury heard some evidence from people like Hope Hicks and Madeline Westerhout, who were aides to Trump in the White House. And Trump is saying the jurors never should have heard that information,
Starting point is 00:03:24 and the whole case should be thrown out on that basis. Carrie, I want to also ask you about this request that Trump had. He asked the Supreme Court to essentially squash this ruling. Obviously they didn't decide to ultimately do that but what was he asking them to do and how do you interpret the Supreme Court's decision? Yeah, this was a last-ditch bid that Trump and his lawyer John Sauer and his lawyer Todd Blanch put into the Supreme Court's decision. Yeah, this was a last-ditch bid that Trump and his lawyer John Sauer and his lawyer Todd Blanch put into the Supreme Court to try to delay the sentencing that occurred today. And late yesterday, we heard the Supreme Court come out with just a couple of paragraphs
Starting point is 00:03:57 denying the idea that they would intervene and make this sentencing go away for Trump. Interestingly enough, this was a five to four decision by the court. And the court majority basically said, you know, any issues with the evidence the jury heard about Hopix and Madeline Westerhout, that can be heard on appeal. We can deal with that later. And then secondly, the court majority said, this really is not going to be a major burden for Trump to appear virtually. He didn't even have to go to the courthouse in New York. And also because the judge had already signaled the week before that Trump wasn't really going to face any consequences. No prison time, no jail time, no fines, no requirement to do drug tests in the White House, none of that. The kind of wild thing
Starting point is 00:04:42 for legal scholars was that four justices appear to have sided with Trump and would have intervened in an extraordinary way in this case. And those were Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Justice Neil Gorsuch, and Justice Brett Kavanaugh. And the thinking there is, you know, usually at this kind of stage, the Supreme Court would only really weigh in if there were like some kind of seriously irreparable harm coming down the pike. There were four criminal cases that Trump was facing. This was seen as the least consequential potentially of them all and is really the only one that came to full fruition. You know, and you have a Supreme Court that now leans heavily toward unfettered essentially presidential
Starting point is 00:05:23 power. People used to say no one is above the law, not even the president. Well, I think the past year has shown that the president is indeed, if not above the law completely, has massive protections that regular people certainly don't have. And, you know, I mean, if you go even bigger than that, I mean, the founders in this country wanted to break away from a monarchy. Instead, we wind up with sort of a pseudo king, you know, two systems of justice. A lot of people talk about one for the rich and poor, one for the privileged and unprivileged. We really have three, it seems, because if
Starting point is 00:05:54 you get to the point where your power is so great that you're above even the rich and powerful in this country where you're the president, you have your own judicial system that's now been carved out something that we hadn't seen really post Richard Nixon because he resigned and it's really now sort of the coda on the end of what happened to start with the Nixon Watergate crisis and not having that settled then, it certainly seems to have been settled now where you have a Supreme Court that's more conservative and leaning toward unilateral power for a president. Domenico, do you see any political repercussions to this sentencing? Well, I mean, Trump won the election, so the political consequences have already happened.
Starting point is 00:06:40 I think that Trump doesn't want to have on his record that he's a convicted felon and that's part of why he is continuing to fight this. He doesn't like that asterisk being next to his name. But didn't he campaign heavily off of it as well? He did so that's the irony is that he campaigned on with this as a badge of honor but in reality he doesn't want this to be something that sticks. He's tried everything he possibly can and frankly he should be thanking his legal team because they were able to get about as good an outcome as could possibly be gotten for an individual.
Starting point is 00:07:11 His legal team and the Supreme Court, which helped him along the way, most notably in that immunity decision last year. And in fact, Osmo, this week we had another data point about Donald Trump in the Supreme Court. That's that Trump actually had a phone call this week with Justice Samuel Alito. We have not heard about this before. It was reported within 24 hours of the phone call. ABC News reported it. And then the Supreme Court confirmed in a statement from Justice Alito that he and Trump talked because Alito says Trump is thinking about hiring one of his former clerks, a guy named William Levy. Levy was a top aide to Bill Barr in the Trump Justice Department, and we know Donald Trump is really leery of Bill Barr. They really went crosswise toward the
Starting point is 00:07:54 end of the administration. And apparently Trump wanted to make sure that Levy was both qualified and loyal, so he had to talk to Justice Alito. Justice Alito seemed to have thought this was a perfectly fine interaction. He said he didn't know at the time Trump was going to go to the Supreme Court in this last-ditch bid to delay sentencing in New York. But certainly there's been a lot of criticism of the justice for taking that phone call and then deciding to vote on the Trump in a way that's favorable for Trump. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:27 Carrie, I want to shift gears ever so slightly and ask you about a somewhat related issue. And that is that many members of Trump's personal legal team are now expected to take jobs in the incoming administration. And there seems to be a lot of blurring of lines between Trump's personal legal world and his political orbit. How do you make sense of that? Yeah, it's remarkable how many lawyers who work for Donald Trump in their private capacity as a client are going to have major league jobs in the Justice Department and elsewhere in the government.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Starting with Pam Bondi, the former Florida attorney general who was defending Trump and even advancing some of his baseless election fraud claims several years back, she's in line to be the attorney general. Her confirmation hearing is in the Senate next week. Next up is Todd Blanche, who actually stood next to Donald Trump today on that Zoom for the sentencing and who told Judge Marchand that they would be appealing. Todd Blanche is in line to be the Deputy Attorney General. That's the second in command of the Justice Department. That's
Starting point is 00:09:29 a major responsibility. He's in charge of the criminal function. People who are in charge of the FBI and the DEA and the ATF would report to Todd Blanch if he's confirmed as the deputy. And Blanch's right-hand man is Emil Bovi, who's another of Trump's lawyers. And then finally, we have a guy named John Sauer. John Sauer is the prospective nominee for Trump to be the Solicitor General of the United States. And in the meantime, he's been filing petitions with the Supreme Court and briefs with the Supreme Court, advancing Trump's personal interest in the New York case and in other
Starting point is 00:10:05 matters as well. So all of those fellows and then separately, it just came out in the last several days that a gentleman named Stanley Woodward, a lawyer here in Washington who represented a number of January 6th Capitol riot defendants, including one accused of seditious conspiracy. Stanley Woodward also has defended Walt Nauta, Trump's right-hand man in valet in Mar-a-Lago. Stanley Woodward is going to be a lawyer and an advisor to Donald Trump in the White House. And here we have lawyers not only being nominated from Trump's legal team, but people who have
Starting point is 00:10:37 continued to stand beside him and represent him at the Supreme Court level, even after they've been announced as his nominees. All right. Thanks, Carrie. We're gonna let you go. Thank you. And let's take a quick break and we'll be back in a moment. And we're back and we're joined now by Miles Parks, who covers voting for us here at NPR.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Hey there, Miles. Hi, Asma. So you have been reporting on the so-called election integrity movement. I know you've been doing a lot of stories around this. I just want you to explain though what this term means. Who makes up this movement? Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, for decades there's been kind of partisan differences in elections generally.
Starting point is 00:11:16 On the right, you know, you have, Republicans have been more in favor of restrictive voting policies, you know, things like photo ID, things like that. Democrats, the left has prioritized things that make generally voting easier. Now, since 2020, I would say there's kind of a third column, this election integrity movement, which is really motivated, still kind of on the right, but really motivated by this idea that elections are not just things you should be skeptical of, but that you are certain they are stolen and that policies need to be based around this idea that elections are being stolen and things need to kind of be wholesale change as opposed to tweaked. And I think one of the
Starting point is 00:11:49 one of the leaders of the movement who I've done a lot of reporting in this piece looks at is somebody named Cleta Mitchell who listeners might remember was on that famous phone call after 2020 when Donald Trump asked Brad Raffensperger, the secretary of state of Georgia, to try to find votes. She has become very influential in crafting this election integrity movement since 2020. So these are folks on the right, but they are further to the right than where Republicans are on voting issues. Exactly. I would say that for a long time, Republicans have been more skeptical of the elections process, but these are people who have really, a lot of them only got interested
Starting point is 00:12:22 in elections after 2020, and therefore their worldview around voting is really driven by Donald Trump's lies about the election system. Now, I find it interesting that the election integrity folks, which is really just a euphemism really, it's amazing to me that they think that, I assume, that this election was perfectly clean and went well, but that 2020 wasn't. I mean, is that true? They do think this past election was fair. One of the most interesting aspects of this to me is that, yes, I would say that is true,
Starting point is 00:12:49 which some people would say that's outcome dependent, right? That Donald Trump did very well. But what I was emailing with Cleta Mitchell and their argument is actually that they became more involved after 2020. And that is why the 2024 election was secure is because there were all these people who got interested in elections and interested in election oversight. So this is a big country. We have a decentralized election system.
Starting point is 00:13:12 How true is what she's saying? Because it strikes me that it's not very true. You're right. When you talk to experts, it's not true. That the administration of this election actually, it's true that there were more people and there was more oversight probably. There were more people interested in elections in 2024 maybe than ever before, but the actual... There is oversight of ever election.
Starting point is 00:13:30 In 2020, there were numerous... How many audits did we report on? How many reports led by Republicans? I always go back to this idea that in every single swing state, there were investigations led by Republicans that found the elections to be accurate. So, no, this idea that 2020 is stolen and 2024 was fair because it isn't true, but it is true that there was probably more citizens involved. Danielle Pletka Miles, if their assessment is that 2024 was fair and that the elections were run fairly smoothly, then what's next on
Starting point is 00:14:02 the group's agenda? Michael O'Brien It does not seem like they are slowing down. I think that is another interesting aspect to me. We acquired this audio. So it's of a panel at a meeting of ALEC, which is this conservative group that helps draft state-level legislation. And we got the audio from the watchdog group, Documented, which passed it along, and to be clear, it was secretly recorded. And so we're able to get this insight into what people in this election integrity movement are telling state conservative state lawmakers. And one of the big
Starting point is 00:14:29 things is that non-citizen voting, which we heard a lot from Trump, from Elon Musk, this was a huge issue leading up to 2024. That's not going away in 2025. That the election integrity movement still wants proof of citizenship, which is a very controversial idea in the voting community, basically requiring people to either show a birth certificate, a passport, documentary proof of citizenship to be able to register to vote. Currently, to register to vote in this country, most people use a driver's license. So most people do have their citizenship verified in some way, but there's no official requirement that you need to show documented proof of citizenship. You have to check a box that says you could be arrested,
Starting point is 00:15:09 you could be deported if you lie about this, and there's never been evidence that not citizens are voting in anything but very miniscule numbers in the U.S., but the election integrity community is really pushing for these sorts of more stringent requirements, which many experts, voting experts say would have a huge impact on communities of color, older voters, people who generally have less access. Surveys have shown people who have less access to these sorts of documents. Miles, have you seen any efforts to try to rewrite the events of the 2020 election? One of the other topics that came up in this meeting that I wanted to touch on is all the panelists talked about pushing the lawmakers not to pass legislation that protects election
Starting point is 00:15:52 workers. And so if you think about that, post 2020, there's been a wide documentation of this sort of like increased harassment and threat landscape for local voting officials. On this panel, all of the panelists talked about this threat environment for local voting officials as being a narrative, as being made up. And so you can hear Sharon Bemis, who works on Cleta Mitchell's organization, talk about this here. So many of us are familiar with the threat narrative that has been very prominent. I think you'll find in your states that it's unbounded. If you ask for police reports, I will age and press against your election administrators.
Starting point is 00:16:29 I think you'll find that it's very rare. And so she talked about explicitly telling the conservative lawmakers in this room, do not pass any legislation that adds new protections to voting officials because it keeps this idea that voting officials are under attack kind of in the mainstream. So do they want to make it easier to threaten election workers? They would say no. I mean, they would say that these people already have enough protections that they're regular citizens, that it's already illegal to assault a person. Like if I just punch you in the face, it's illegal for me to do that. And so you being a voting official
Starting point is 00:16:57 doesn't change that. But I do think it's the opposite point, right? It's like, then what's the harm in passing new protections for these people considering more than 20 people have been arrested for threatening violence against voting officials since 2020? We've heard countless Republicans, Democrats, voting officials talk about the fact that this environment has changed. So that is not a debatable fact, but we are seeing a preview, going to your point, Asma, of what's coming in 2025, I think, in terms of the rewrite
Starting point is 00:17:25 of what happened in 2020 and following that election. And it falls into this larger just reimagining of base facts and information and evidence that we've seen so routinely in the last several years. Miles, do you have any final takeaways from the 2024 election? I think the biggest takeaway for me, all that matters at this point is how the candidates who ran in that race talk about it. And we saw Kamala Harris accept defeat quickly, concede in that election, and we saw Donald Trump stop spreading lies after it became clear he was going to win.
Starting point is 00:17:56 And we see now that wide majorities of Democrats and Republicans trust the process. Leadership matters. All right, one more quick break, but Miles, stick with us because when we get back, we'll have Can't Let It Go. We're back and it's now time for the part of the show that I know you all love called Can't Let It Go. That is the part of the show where we talk about the things from the week that we just
Starting point is 00:18:17 cannot stop talking about, politics or otherwise. And Domenico, why don't you kick it off? I'm staying politics because, you know, we've all watched here the Carter funeral. I thought it was really heartfelt. But what I can't let go of is the seating arrangements and how you had these presidents, ex-presidents, and their families all sitting together and the kind of weird, you know, cartoonish interactions that you
Starting point is 00:18:46 saw between the presidents and their families. Everything from, you know, when Donald Trump and Melania Trump came in, had this really awkward handshake with Mike Pence, you know, and Karen Pence, who refused to stand up, continued to look at her program, didn't shake hands, didn't make eye contact. Then Barack Obama is there, and Barack Obama, it seems like everyone got together and said, he's it. He's the guy who is going to be the buffer between all of us and Trump.
Starting point is 00:19:18 He's going to have to talk to Trump. They seem to be yucking it up. There are all kinds of memes going around about what it was they were talking about. But yucking it up, Domenico. I mean, at some point, you know, you've been in those awkward assigned seating situations that you're like at a wedding and you're seated next to somebody. You can't be rude. I am terrible at small talk.
Starting point is 00:19:35 But just watching Barack Obama and Donald Trump talk, I was just like, what are they talking about? I mean, there's just so much stuff. I don't, I didn't monitor the memes super closely, but I did. There's a podcaster, John Boyd. Oh, I love John Boyd. He does all the lip readings. He does lip readings. I was thinking, I was like, this would be a great John Boyd clip of, so that would be awesome. Oh, you need to pitch. I hope he listens.
Starting point is 00:19:58 Yeah, exactly. Someone show this to him. Request. Well, Miles, what about you? What can you not let go of? What I cannot let go of is not related to politics at all, but I have a new favorite rapper. I can't wait to hear it. I know exactly. That's kind of, I was like, sometimes I'm like public service. I have an idea of who it might be. It's in my head. I want to see if it's the same. So, Dochi. That's it. Let's go! Because of this tiny desk? Yes, the tiny desk. I mean, like a month and a half ago, full disclosure, they do record these tiny desks a few weeks sometimes in advance of when they actually publish.
Starting point is 00:20:31 I know, we're telling you how it happens. Exactly. But they are recorded on our floor where we work. And so, occasionally, this will happen where you'll kind of be walking and from across the floor, you'll see a group of people and you can kind of hear. This happened to me when the Dochi Tiny Desk was happening is I was on the other side of the floor and I just kind of like heard the beginning of it
Starting point is 00:20:50 and could see the energy of the way people were responding to and I walked over and I think, I mean, I've now been at NPR 10 years. I think it was the best tiny desk I've ever seen in person in terms of- Especially I had not listened to her before and I'm embarrassed to say that, because I try to be up.
Starting point is 00:21:06 I had a baby this year, so I'm a little behind in my music, but it was truly a breathtaking performance. And then, for me, selfishly, I obviously go down the rabbit hole. I'm grinding her mixtapes. I'm into it, and I read the Wikipedia, and she's from my hometown. Oh, cool.
Starting point is 00:21:24 So she's from Tampa, Florida. And just to find that, I don't know, it was just a very special day for me to be like, I have a new favorite rapper and she's from Tampa. So the listeners, go check out the tiny desk. We'll have to see what she thinks about election integrity. Yeah, I don't know. She didn't rap about it. I'll say that much. Yeah, wow.
Starting point is 00:21:39 We got to wait for a verse. Yeah, exactly. Post-2026 mixtape. Maybe she's listening to this podcast. Mixtape, I love that. I love that. Asma, what can't you let go of? All right, so I don't wanna bring the mood way, way down,
Starting point is 00:21:51 but I can be a cerebral person, as you all know sometimes, and I think what has been genuinely hard for me to let go of this week have been the apocalyptic pictures out of the West Coast of Southern California. I have been not able to pictures out of the west coast of Southern California. I have been not able to, like, look away from the photos on Instagram because they are so horrific. You see these images of people who've just abandoned their cars.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Their whole home's gone. And I just want to give a shout out to I'm sure the many listeners we have in Southern California because I cannot imagine being in that situation. It is horror upon horror watching those pictures and videos. And so they have been in my minds a lot this week. And I'm sorry that I'm leaving you all on such a down note, but it's just been something I haven't been able to stop thinking about. Well, we have a huge listener base in California, and we all have friends who live out there,
Starting point is 00:22:45 and just checking in with a lot of them to see where they are, if they're safe, if their homes are okay, and if they're okay. So we're certainly thinking of everybody there. Well, I do think also, to your point, Asma, of literally not being able to let this go, I come from a land of hurricanes, that's Florida's natural disaster
Starting point is 00:23:05 of choice or whatever you want to call it. Wildfires to me are, in my opinion, the most visceral of... I don't know. I've had the same response as you. There's something very viscerally unsettling. And so, yeah, I don't know exactly what that is, but I'm with you. All right. Well, that is a wrap for today's show. Our executive producer is Masoni Maturi. Our editor is Casey Morel. Our producers are Bria Suggs and Kelly Wessinger. Special thanks to Anna Yukhanov.
Starting point is 00:23:35 I'm Asma Khalid. I cover the White House. I'm Miles Parks. I cover voting. And I'm Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent. And thank you all, as always, for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.

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