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“The people call Stormy Daniels”

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Plus: Ethnic cleansing in Darfur, wine industry struggles in California, and more. May 10, 2024 Happ

Plus: Ethnic cleansing in Darfur, wine industry struggles in California, and more. May 10, 2024 [View in browser]( Happy Friday! Today, senior reporter Li Zhou is here to catch us on what's been happening in the Donald Trump criminal trial alleging he falsified business records to cover up a hush money payment to Stormy Daniels. —Caroline Houck, senior editor of news   [Stormy Daniels leaves Manhattan Criminal Court on May 9, 2024, in New York City.] Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images The Trump hush money case has been a quiet affair. Enter Stormy Daniels. A [New York case]( against former [President Donald Trump](, once considered the [least important of the four criminal suits]( he faces, could now be the only one to have a direct impact ahead of the election. This case, which centers on whether Trump falsified business records in order to hide hush money payments to adult actress Stormy Daniels, is currently on trial. (Two cases involving Trump’s attempts to overturn the [2020 election](, as well as a third involving his mishandling of classified documents, [are stalled]( and may not be heard in court until after November.) And boy what a trial it is — [cutting memes](, [potential betrayals](, and more. Despite the significance of the New York trial, it hasn’t necessarily broken through to most US voters: As of late April, just 45 percent of people have been following its developments, [according to a PBS/NPR/Marist poll](. Because Trump has faced so many legal cases, including [another civil suit related to business fraud](, many people have grappled with fatigue as these cases have blurred together. Enter: Daniels’s testimony this week. Given her prominent platform, the ongoing interest in her relationship with Trump, and her willingness to speak out [about the intimidation she’s faced in the past](, Daniels’s appearance seemed to raise the case’s profile. It’s not likely, however, that it will shift much of Trump’s core support just yet. [US President Donald Trump returns after a break in his trial] Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images What Daniels said Daniels’s testimony, which spanned multiple days this week, featured intimate details about her 2006 encounter with Trump and marked the first time the [two had come face to face in years](. By divulging this information, Daniels helped prosecutors establish that she and Trump had had a sexual relationship, something he has denied. Providing evidence of that relationship enables prosecutors to make the case that he had reason to pay money to cover it up. The defense team, meanwhile, sought to undermine Daniels’s credibility by asking about her animus toward Trump and her financial incentives for coming forward about the relationship with him. While Daniels’s testimony may not be as key as that of Michael Cohen, [Trump’s former lawyer]( who allegedly helped facilitate the hush money payments and who is expected to take the stand to testify against him, it does provide “the critical motive for Trump to be frantic about her revelations weeks before the election and try to buy her silence,” Pace University law professor Bennett Gershman told Vox. Below are some excerpts of what Daniels said on the witness stand. - She described in detail her sexual encounter with Trump. Daniels recounted the 2006 relationship, noting that her “own insecurities, in that moment, kept [her] from saying no,” and that she felt there was a “power imbalance.” She also included specifics, stating that Trump was initially wearing silk or satin pajamas, that he did not wear a condom, and that he asked about her career. After the encounter, she says he told her, “Let’s get together again, honey bunch.” Following this testimony on Tuesday, the defense called for a mistrial, arguing that Daniels’s statements would prejudice the jury against Trump. The judge denied this request. - She [denied]( that her decision to speak out about Trump was motivated by money. Daniels was questioned multiple times by the defense about whether she was motivated to come forward because of financial gain. Daniels said that she had profited from the story but emphasized that she was looking for accountability. “I have been making money by telling my story,” she said, while also adding, “It has also cost me a lot of money.” Daniels also said that it had been a net “negative” for her life to come forward about the encounter. - She pushed back on claims that she fabricated her story. Daniels repeatedly rebutted assertions from the defense suggesting that she had made up the encounter. “If that story was untrue,” she said, “I would’ve written it to be a lot better.” - She made clear she dislikes Trump. The defense pressed Daniels on her stance toward the former President in an attempt to undermine her reliability. “Am I correct that you hate President Trump?” defense attorney Susan Necheles [asked](. “Yes,” Daniels responded. - She confirmed she received the hush money payment but did not confirm Trump’s involvement. Daniels testified that she received [$130,000 in exchange for signing a nondisclosure agreement](. She also stated that her attorney had [negotiated the payment with Cohen]( and that she did not have knowledge of Trump’s involvement with it. [Trump speaks during a rally on May 1, 2024 at Avflight Saginaw in Freeland, Michigan.] Nic Antaya/Getty Images Will it break through? Notably, there’s been less enthusiasm about this election so far relative to past ones. [In April, an NBC News poll]( found that the proportion of voters who have high interest in the presidential contest has hit a 20-year low. As one [Democrat put it in a New York Times story]( about the general burnout members of the “[resistance](” have experienced this year, “It’s crisis fatigue, for sure.” Daniels’s testimony has certainly generated more attention this week, though experts note that it alone might not be enough to hurt Trump’s base. “Stormy Daniels has always been clickbait. Thus, more people are likely to tune in to hear about her testimony than the testimony of the Trump Org’s controller,” said Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, a law professor at Stetson University. This is also one of the cases against Trump that’s on [shakier legal ground](, some experts say, and Trump’s core backers in particular already view this trial as a political attack. That’s unlikely to change, says Republican pollster Whit Ayres. “If I were designing a legal case that would be easy for Republicans to dismiss as a partisan witch hunt, I would design exactly the case that’s being brought in New York,” Ayres told Vox. Ultimately, it could well come down to a conviction to determine whether there’s an impact on the [2024 election]( at all. An [April AP poll found that 47 percent]( of independents, some of whom could be swing voters, would not consider Trump to be fit to be president if he is convicted. —[Li Zhou, senior reporter](   [Listen]( Biden’s breaking point on Gaza President Joe Biden says the US won’t supply further weapons if Israel is going to use them in Rafah. Axios reporter Barak Ravid explains what that means for the war. [Listen now](   AROUND THE WORLD - Grim historical repetition: Militias have, once again, carried out brutal ethnic cleansings in at least some parts of Darfur, according to a report from Human Rights Watch. [[Vox](] - The sort of story movies get made about: Soccer has a beautiful story happening right now: Germany’s perennial underdogs [Bayer Leverkusen have spent the year on a remarkable, heartwarming, odds-defying run](. Now, with a draw yesterday, they’ve broken Europe’s almost 60-year-old record for the longest stretch of unbeaten matches. [[CBS Soccer](] - Doomed project was, indeed, doomed: Ten years ago, Nicaragua broke symbolic ground for a Chinese-backed interoceanic canal. The economic, political, and environmental math always raised eyebrows, to put it gently. Now, Nicaragua has finally canceled the project, but that doesn’t much help the rural and indigenous communities who were displaced for the pipe dream. [[AP](] [Players of Leverkusen celebrate after the UEFA Europa League semi-final second leg football match ] Hesham Elsherif/Anadolu via Getty Images FOOD - Nooooooo!: California’s wine industry is in serious trouble. [[SF Chronicle](] - John Fetterman has beef with no-kill meat: Lab-grown meat is, sigh, the new political culture war fight. [[Vox](]   A new era of cannabis research Last week, the US Drug Enforcement Administration announced a move to reclassify marijuana as a Schedule III drug. Here's what that could mean for science. [Listen now](   Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here](. And as always, we want to know what you think. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story you’re curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Today's edition was produced and edited by Caroline Houck. We'll see you Monday!   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( [TikTok]( [WhatsApp]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( [unsubscribe](param=sentences). If you value Vox’s unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1701 Rhode Island Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20036. Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved.

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