For the second time, turnout for protests outside the courthouse where former President Donald Trump was arraigned fell far below expectations. More than the first instance in April, though, this flop is a clear sign of weakness for the authoritarian populist. And it could indicate that Trump lacks the level of command over his base that’s needed to survive such an unprecedented political scandal.
After Trump’s first indictment in Manhattan over falsifying business records in order to pay hush money to adult film star Stormy Daniels, he called on his supporters to mobilize en masse and protest on his behalf. That didn’t happen. Though hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers voted for Trump in 2020, the pro-Trump crowd outside that arraignment numbered in the hundreds. MAGA superstar Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., headlined one rally, but when she spoke she was mostly surrounded by a sea of reporters, not supporters. More embarrassingly, her speech was barely audible, in part because a band of anti-Trump counterprotesters showed up and made a lot of noise.
Trump’s weak protest numbers are also more striking this time because his allies’ calls to action were more intense.
Trump’s Miami arraignment indicates that his grip on his supporters remains loose, even more so than in New York. Ahead of the arraignment, Trump again called for protests and posted on Truth Social, “SEE YOU IN MIAMI ON TUESDAY.” Yet once again, turnout was underwhelming. Miami’s police chief said he was preparing for a crowd size between 5,000 and 50,000 people. As Trump surrendered to federal custody on Tuesday afternoon, estimates conveyed to me independently by three journalists outside the courthouse – from NBC News, The Daily Beast and Slate – put the crowd somewhere between 500 and 2,000 people at its peak. That’s a fraction of the lowest end of the city’s estimate.
There are a couple of reasons this showing makes Trump look worse than in New York.
First, Florida is home turf for Trump. The state is his adopted home and it has grown far redder during his rise to national influence; he is now deeply intertwined with Florida’s political culture. Over 5 million people voted for Trump in Florida in 2020, including over half a million in Miami-Dade County alone. And while New York also has plenty of Trump voters, publicly rallying on behalf of Trump is a more radical statement in Manhattan than it is in Florida. As Trump’s post-arraignment stop at a local restaurant showed, it isn’t hard to find huge numbers of unabashed supporters within a drivable distance of the Miami federal courthouse. Yet they could barely bother to show up.
Second, Trump’s weak protest numbers are also more striking this time because his allies’ calls to action were more intense. Allies like Arizona MAGA activist Kari Lake showed up. So did Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who promised in a speech in Miami to pardon Trump if he won the White House. Meanwhile, Republicans across the country framed the federal indictment over Trump’s willful retention of classified documents as a dangerous escalation by the Biden administration and even as an act of war. Rep. Clay Higgins of Louisiana issued a call to supporters that described the indictment and how he felt the right should respond to it in overtly martial language.








