For former President Donald J. Trump, 2024 was supposed to be dominated by criminal trials. Instead, he’s found ways to delay almost all of them.
Alan Feuer, who covers the criminal cases against Mr. Trump for The Times, explains how he did it.
Guest: Alan Feuer, who covers extremism and political violence for The New York Times.
Background reading:
For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
A Mother, a Daughter, a Deadly Journey: An Update
Inside Russia’s Crackdown on Dissent: An Update
How A Paradise Became A Death Trap: An Update
Biden Supports Israel. Does the Rest of America?
The New State of the War in Gaza
Why a Colorado Court Just Knocked Trump Off the Ballot
Football’s Young Victims
The Man Who Counts Every Shooting in America
The Sunday Read: ‘Bariatric Surgery at 16’
The Year of Taylor Swift
The Woman Who Fought the Texas Abortion Ban
Antisemitism and Free Speech Collide on Campuses
Ukraine’s Counteroffensive Fizzled. U.S. Funding May Be Next.
Can an ‘Anarcho-Capitalist’ President Save Argentina’s Economy?
The Sunday Read: ‘The Bodily Indignities of the Space Life’
Biden Is Trying to Rein In Israel. Is It Working?
Nikki Haley’s Moment
Opioid Victims Have a Settlement. Will the Supreme Court Undo It?
The Blurry Line Between Rap Star and Crime Boss
The Oct. 7 Warning That Israel Ignored
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Up First
Consider This from NPR
What Next | Daily News and Analysis
Hard Fork
Today, Explained