Trump’s race for the White House runs through the courtroom

By Nancy Cook, Bill Allison and Gregory Korte, Bloomberg News

In Iowa, former President Donald Trump appears headed for victory in the first-in-the-nation caucuses on Jan. 15.

In New York – and in Florida, and in Georgia, and in Washington, DC – Trump is headed for something else: court.

For months, a divided nation has confronted the strange prospect of a split-screen election season, with Trump, the candidate, on one side, and Trump, the defendant, on the other.

Now, that prospect is about to become reality – and upend presidential politics, if not the American presidency itself. For the first time, courtrooms across the nation are about to become some of the most crucial stops on the road to the White House.

Three years after a mob attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in support of Trump, the worlds of politics and law are colliding spectacularly over the events of that day and the dueling narratives around them.

The legal dramas stemming from Jan. 6 and Trump’s business dealings have already put the 2024 race on an unprecedented course.

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