Major Republican donors say they're willing to back the first convicted felon running for US president, with at least one giving money to Donald Trump for the first time, according to around a dozen benefactors and fundraisers.
Many conservative donors already viewed the New York hush money cash as political persecution, echoing the Republican presidential candidate's claim that Democrats are trying to weaken him ahead of the 5 November election against President Joe Biden. Prosecutors have dismissed those claims as untrue.
A New York jury found Trump guilty on Thursday of falsifying documents to cover up a payment to silence a porn star ahead of the 2016 election.
Newshub's UC correspondent Mitch McCann said Trump had received a lot of support from Reupublicans since the verdicts were announced, including from the House Speaker Mike Johnson who had called the verdicts "absurd".
"Republicans are really rallying around him."
Trump found guilty of falsifying business records
Since the verdicts his campaign website has crashed as enthusiastic donors try to pledge money, McCann told Midday Report.
"It's going to be interesting to see whether or not he loses any support because of these convictions because at the moment it seems if he's only gaining it."
He said experts were saying it would be "a logistical nightmare" if Trump was jailed because he needed to have Secret Service agents with him wherever he went.
The experts mostly believed he would be fined or placed on probation.
However, it was incredible to think Trump could be the serving president while behind bars.
The verdict has spurred some major donors to boost their financial support for Trump - and, in at least one case, make a big donation to him for the first time, Reuters says.
Don Tapia, a former Trump ambassador to Jamaica, said he and a small network of family and friends with whom he donates had planned to give around $US250,000 ($NZ408,000) this election to support Trump.
After Thursday's conviction, Tapia told Reuters the group would aim to give over $1 million to the pro-Trump spending group MAGA in coming weeks.
"We're going to go all-in for him," said Tapia. He sent Reuters a photo of an American flag flying upside down outside his home in Paradise Valley, Arizona in protest at the verdict.
A Silicon Valley tech investor, Shaun Maguire, posted on social media site X after the verdict that he had donated $US300,000 to support Trump.
"I believe our justice system is being weaponised against him," said Maguire, who described himself as a former Hillary Clinton supporter who switched to supporting Trump in 2021 after US President Joe Biden's chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan. Maguire told Reuters he had not previously donated to Trump.
Robert Bigelow, who is one of Trump's top supporters having given over $9 million to an outside group supporting him, said the verdict had no impact on him. "All of the charges are contrived," Bigelow told Reuters.
The interviews show the depth of Trump's donor support despite his legal woes, suggesting he will retain significant financial firepower against Biden including from Wall Street, tech and the oil sector.
The donors interviewed by Reuters were also broadly upbeat about Trump winning in November based on a number of public opinion polls that put Trump ahead against Biden in some battleground states.
"I think that big donors are paying attention to the polls, not the verdict," said oil businessman Dan Eberhart, a Trump donor who also helps raise money for the former president's campaign. "The polls are motivating this latest round of businessmen," Eberhart added, saying that calls from donors had picked up "considerably."
After setting out with a fundraising disadvantage against Biden, Trump for the first time in April outraised his Democratic rival, aided by fundraising events across the country. Several donors, including casino billionaire Miriam Adelson, recently pledged support for Trump.
Andy Sabin, a metals businessman and Republican donor who supported three different candidates in the Republican presidential primary before settling on voting for Trump but has not donated to him so far, does not see the verdict having an impact.
"I haven't met one donor yet that gives a shit about the trial. No matter how much they hate Trump, they think he's getting screwed," said Sabin, who regularly attends fundraisers and is donating to congressional candidates.
Trump can absolutely win the election, Sabin added, "as long as he keeps his mouth shut".
In the last few weeks, Trump has hit the fundraising trail hard, hosting high-end events from Texas to New York. He is due to host three fundraisers in California next month, according to invitations seen by Reuters, including one in left-wing San Francisco hosted by tech venture capitalists.
"Every event that I'm involved with is exceeding budget," said George Glass, a Trump campaign fundraiser and his former ambassador to Portugal. "Most donors feel like the 'fix' is in," Glass said about legal proceedings against Trump.
Some Republican donors do remain holdouts, put off by the 6 January, 2021, Capitol riot, Trump's brash attitude or the prospect of Trump being sentenced to jail. "I'm on the sidelines," said one donor unsure about whether to donate, mostly because of the "drama" around Trump.
-Reuters / RNZ