Donald Trump rails against New York fraud ruling while on Michigan campaign trail

Former US president calls Friday’s decision to fine him $355 million ‘a lawless and unconstitutional atrocity’

Donald Trump with his new line of signature shoes in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Donald Trump with his new line of signature shoes in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Former US president Donald Trump has railed against the judge who slapped him with a $355 million (€329 million) fine in his New York civil fraud trial while facing penalties that, with interest, could exceed half-a-billion dollars.

Mr Trump was campaigning in Michigan on Saturday – a state that is expected to be critical in November as he pivots towards a likely general election rematch against President Joe Biden.

While Mr Biden narrowly beat Mr Trump here in 2020, the president is facing deep scepticism in the state, especially from Arab-American voters angry over his support for Israel in the Israel-Hamas war as the Palestinian death toll has climbed.

Mr Trump, meanwhile, has been working to appeal to the blue-collar and union voters who were critical to his victory in 2016.

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On Saturday, he again made his pitch to auto workers, railing against electric vehicle mandates that he argues will ultimately lead to lost jobs and touted tariffs he put in place.

“We have to let them know a freight train is coming in November,” Mr Trump told more than 2,000 supporters gathered in a freezing plane hangar in Waterford Township, in the suburbs of Detroit.

But Mr Trump was again most focused on his grievances, opening with a 15-minute screed about the criminal and civil cases against him.

On Friday, a judge in New York ordered Trump to pay $355 million after concluding he had lied about his wealth for years, scheming to dupe banks, insurers and others by inflating his wealth on financial statements.

Mr Trump has vowed to appeal.

That penalty came days after Mr Trump was ordered to pay $83.3 million dollars to the writer E Jean Carroll for damaging her reputation after she accused him of sexual assault.

Mr Trump cast Friday’s decision as “a lawless and unconstitutional atrocity that sets fire to our laws like no one has ever seen in this country before”.

He called the judge in the case, Arthur Engoron, “crooked”, and New York attorney general Letitia James, who brought the case, a “lunatic”.

He also called special counsel Jack Smith, who brought two federal indictments against him an “animal”, while mocking the pronunciation of Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis’s name.

Before his rally in Michigan, Mr Trump appeared at a convention for sneaker fans in Philadelphia, where he launched his own sneaker brand – gold-topped with American flag logos.

“I’ve wanted to do this a long time,” Mr Trump said, before urging young people to vote.

Mr Trump has succeeded in the Republican primary by casting the legal charges – which include state and federal criminal indictments across four separate jurisdictions – as part of a co-ordinated effort by Mr Biden and other Democrats to damage his electoral prospects.

He has also repeatedly cast them as an attack on his supporters.

“These repulsive abuses of power are not just an attack on me, they’re really an attack on you and all Americans,” Mr Trump said on Saturday. “We’re all in this mess together.”

But it is unclear whether those appeals will work in a general election, particularly among suburban voters in key swing-state metro areas in places like Oakland County, where Mr Trump was speaking. – AP