Current Affairs

Trump Says He Would Have Had a ‘Very Nasty Life’ if He’d Lost the Election

President Trump said on Wednesday that he would have obtained a “very bad life” if he lost the presidential elections, which is amazingly publicly that his legal challenges could have consumed his life and brought imprisonment.

“If you lost, it would be very bad,” said Mr. Trump at the summit of investment in Miami. “It was dangerous, in fact very dangerous.”

When Mr. Trump won in November, the Ministry of Justice abandoned two federal cases against him, and a judge in Manhattan issued an unconditional discharge in the case of his money silence.

Mr. Trump gave a voice to something that his advisers have long said that he was in the back of his mind while carrying out a campaign. But he did not publicly recognize the year 2024 that he was carrying out campaigns for his freedom as much as the White House himself.

The President made the comments in response to a question about how to spend a public if he obtained a leave. Mr. Trump did not directly answer the question, saying that he is honored to be president. But he said that it took a “certain amount of courage” to run again due to personal dangers.

Mr. Trump also said that he did not agree to the evaluation of historians that Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln, who were assassinated, were the presidents who were subjected to ill -treatment.

He said: “No one was treated like me.” “No one, and I will tell you, you learn a lot about yourself, but there is nothing better to do.”

During the presidential campaign, Mr. Trump faced dozens of criminal charges in four different cases. Jack Smith, who held the position of a private advisor, accused him in two different cases, one related to the attack on January 6, 2021, on the Capitol and another related to dealing with him with government documents classified after leaving the White House in 2021. The issue of documents was rejected by a judge appointed by Trump, But Mr. Smith’s team was resumed.

He also faced charges in Georgia due to attempts to cancel his loss in the elections in 2020, and was convicted of all charges in the issue of silence money in New York, where he could face up to four years in prison.

Maggie Haberman The reports contributed.

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