Donald Trump said he would accept home confinement or prison time after his historic conviction by a New York jury last week but that it would be tough for the public to accept.
“I’m not sure the public would stand for it,” the Republican presidential candidate told Fox News in an interview that was broadcast on Sunday. “I think it’d be tough for the public to take. You know, at a certain point, there’s a breaking point.”
A jury on Thursday found Trump guilty of 34 felony counts over falsifying documents to cover up a payment to silence a porn star ahead of the 2016 election.
Asked what Trump supporters should do if he were jailed, Republic National Committee Co-Chair Lara Trump told CNN: “Well, they’re gonna do what they’ve done from the beginning, which is remain calm and protest at the ballot box on November 5th. There’s nothing to do other than make your voices heard loud and clear and speak out against this.”
The RNC and the Trump campaign raised US$70 million in the 48 hours after the verdict, Lara Trump said, a figure that Reuters was not able to independently verify. Asked how much would be used to pay legal fees versus running the campaign, she declined to say.
At least one Democratic lawmaker expressed concern on Sunday about the potential for Trump’s supporters to respond violently to his conviction.
“His base listens to him. They don’t listen to Lara Trump. And this is another dangerous appeal to violence,” Democratic US Representative Adam Schiff told CNN.
But US House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Trump ally, said any response must be lawful.
“We are the rule of law party – chaos is not a conservative value. We have to fight back and we will with everything in our arsenal. But we do that within the confines of the rule of law,” Johnson told Fox News Sunday.
Trump lawyer Will Scharf told ABC News’ This Week that he does not expect Trump to “end up being subject to any sentence whatsoever” and planned to ultimately take the case to the Supreme Court.
Biden, meanwhile, has sought to defend the nation’s justice system, saying it is “reckless” and “dangerous” to call the verdict “rigged”. The US Justice Department denies any political interference.