Candidate Donald Trump: The resilience of a leader unaffected by discredit or condemnation The Republican candidate has turned every judicial, business, or media setback and the controversies over racist insults at his rallies into a golden opportunity to raise money and secure votes Even if he were to succeed and be re-elected, Donald Trump would return to the White House with a thorn in his side. New York, the city he loves, the seat of his empire, the dock where he has been tried and convicted, still sees him as a body, more than strange, extemporaneous. The suspicion was evident after the Republican’s rally last Sunday at Madison Square Garden , with which he intended to put the finishing touch to the campaign.
The flow of racist insults from his opening acts —about 30; with Trump everything is large-scale — stole the show and the magnate, who boasts of having contributed to the brilliance of the city that disdains him, was forced to watch how the roar of the controversy silenced his message. Katherine, a political independent, gave her opinion of him as she left the rally: “Trump has spent his entire life trying to be accepted as a rich, classy guy in New York. He is very angry that he has always been seen as what he really is: a criminal.
That is why he insisted on holding a rally here, but he has been burned.” Describing him as a criminal is not an exaggeration, just a definition: Trump is the first former president and presidential candidate to be convicted .