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Hunter Biden’s guilty verdict Tuesday , coupled with a trial that resurfaced dark moments in the Biden family history, could weigh heavily on the president in the final months of a grueling reelection campaign, many of the president’s allies privately worry. The political impact is less clear, and even some Republicans on Tuesday dismissed Hunter’s offense – lying on a gun purchase form six years ago – as relatively minor. Republican leaders still hope the verdict paints the Bidens as lawbreakers and offsets Donald Trump’s own criminal conviction.

Democratic strategists argued, meanwhile, that voters are unlikely to hold the president accountable for his son’s behavior. But the personal toll on a president who has already suffered the deaths of two children and grappled for years with his son’s addiction could be far more severe. “What normal human being would not be torn apart to see his family’s anguish played out in a courtroom in front of the world?” said David Axelrod, a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama.



“And to see people you love having to testify, not just your son, but your daughters-in-law and your granddaughter, all reliving the most painful moments of their lives – who wouldn’t be shattered by that?” Axelrod added: “I don’t think voters are going to hold Biden accountable for his son’s addiction or his son’s misbehavior. But I think the real question is the toll it takes on him and his family.” Hunter Biden, a.

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