Politics
Donald Trump’s new sentencing date in New York? That could be delayed, too.
![Donald Trump’s new sentencing date in New York? That could be delayed, too.](https://bluelightnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/1952-donald-trumps-new-sentencing-date-in-new-york-that-could-be-delayed-too.jpg)
It wasn’t surprising when Judge Juan Merchan on Friday postponed Donald Trump’s New York state sentencing until after the presidential election. After all, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office all but agreed with Trump’s delay request.
But Merchan not only set a new sentencing date for Nov. 26, pushing it back most recently from Sept. 18. The judge also pushed back the date for ruling on Trump’s motion to set aside his guilty verdicts based on the Supreme Court’s immunity rulingfrom Sept. 16 to Nov. 12.
But this new schedule risks even further delay.
When Trump’s lawyers asked Merchan last month to push back the sentencing, they told him that if he ruled on Sept. 16 against Trump’s immunity claim, then they were immediately going to seek to challenge his ruling on appeal before any sentencing could take place. “The requested adjournment is also necessary to allow President Trump adequate time to assess and pursue state and federal appellate options in response to any adverse ruling,” they wroteadding that “a single business day is an unreasonably short period of time for President Trump to seek to vindicate these rights.”
Putting aside whether Trump’s immunity claim in the so-called hush money case has any merit, it’s true that, had Merchan rejected that claim on Sept. 16 while keeping the Sept. 18 sentencing, there was a good chance that that sentencing wouldn’t have happened as scheduled. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office effectively agreed with that notion, writing to Merchan last month that:
Assuming that defendant seeks an interim stay of the sentencing hearing immediately after this Court’s September 16 ruling, the People respectfully note that an appellate court considering such a request will understand that, without an interim stay, it would have to receive briefing and decide certain issues of first impression in one day.
So it made some sense for Merchan to delay the sentencing. That is, it made sense as much as anything can after the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling in the federal election interference case. That ruling shouldn’t have called into question Trump’s state prosecution for covering up a private hush money scheme, but here we are.
So the decision to push to November a ruling on Trump’s motion to set aside his guilty verdicts means that, if Merchan rules against Trump at that point, Trump’s appellate challenges will still need to play out; that’s his lawyers’ stated intention, at least. There’s now more space between that ruling and sentencing — from Sept. 16 and 18 to Nov. 12 and 26, respectively.
Would it take less than two weeks to address Trump’s challenges before his state sentencing could go forward? Especially if those challenges include a trip to the Supreme Court, whose immunity ruling helped Trump get to this point? We won’t know the answer until after the election — again, that’s if Merchan rejects Trump’s immunity claim — and much else can happen between now and then, legally and politically.
But whatever happens at the ballot box, we shouldn’t carve this new sentencing date into stone just yet, however delayed it has already been.
Subscribe to theDeadline: Legal Newsletterfor updates and expert analysis on the top legal stories. The newsletter will return to its regular weekly schedule when the Supreme Court’s next term kicks off in October.
Jordan Rubin is the Deadline: Legal Blog writer. He was a prosecutor for the New York County District Attorney’s Office in Manhattan and is the author of “Bizarro,” a book about the secret war on synthetic drugs. Before he joined BLN, he was a legal reporter for Bloomberg Law.
Politics
Democrats zero in on Musk as a way to attack Trump
![](https://bluelightnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/democratic-national-convention-91540-scaled.jpg)
Democrats are starting to wake up and sketch out a plan to help them win back the working class: Turn the world’s richest person into their boogeyman.
They’ve set their sights on holding Elon Musk to account. Armed with new polling showing Musk’s popularity in the toilet, key Democratic leaders are going after the top Trump adviser who is dismantling the federal government. They are attempting to subpoena him and introducing legislation to block him from receiving federal contracts while he holds a “special” role leading Trump’s cost-cutting crusade.
In a sign of how toxic Democrats believe Musk is, battleground Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine) called Musk an “unelected, weirdo billionaire” and said he has “been getting a lot of calls over the past few days” about him. Golden is a moderate who represents Trump country.
Even Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), who represents Silicon Valley and has had a relationship with Musk for years, is distancing himself from him. Khanna posted on X on Wednesday that Musk’s “attacks on our institutions are unconstitutional.” Khanna previously likened Musk to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “dollar-a-year men,” the corporate leaders who helped the government mobilize for WWII, and said he texts with him.
Democrats are also protesting him in Washington, making the calculation that the idea of an unelected billionaire wreaking chaos on the bureaucracy will be unpopular with voters. And they have some data fueling their efforts.
New internal polling, conducted on behalf of House Majority Forward, a nonprofit aligned with House Democratic leadership, found Musk is viewed negatively among 1,000 registered voters in battleground districts. Just 43 percent approve of him and 51 percent view him unfavorably. The poll, conducted by the Democratic firm Impact Research and completed between Jan. 19 to 25, also found that Musk evoked strong negative feelings. Of the 51 percent who disapproved of him, 43 percent did so strongly.
The survey isn’t a one-off, either. An Economist/YouGov poll published on Wednesday also found Musk’s approval rating underwater, 43 percent favorable to 49 percent unfavorable.
In the Democrats’ internal polling, pollsters asked respondents for their thoughts on “the creation of a government of the rich for the rich by appointing up to nine different billionaires to the administration,” and found 70 percent opposed with only 19 percent in support — a stat that suggests Democrats have landed on a message that could gain traction with swing voters.
That data and focus groups held by House Majority Forward helped bring attacks on the administration into focus: Democrats “shouldn’t chide Musk, Trump, and others for being rich,” the group wrote, but point out Musk’s conflicts of interests as head of DOGE and note that he could undermine key safety net programs to enrich himself at the expense of American taxpayers.
“Participants laud Musk’s business acumen and aren’t opposed to the ideals of DOGE,” HMF found. But “Musk’s relationship with Trump – who they view as inherently pro-big business” makes them wary that billionaire’s cuts “could include programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.”
Politics
House Democrats try, and fail, to subpoena Musk
Democrats on the House Oversight Committee moved to subpoena tech billionaire and Trump ally Elon Musk at a hearing Wednesday — and one Democrat was conspicuously missing from the vote, Rep. Ro Khanna of California, who represents Silicon Valley and has a longtime relationship with the billionaire…
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