8 Trump losses in a row, and counting

Donald Trump surprised the world by winning the US presidential election in 2016, establishing a mystique as somebody who can break rules, violate norms, take crazy risks, and still win.

The mystique is gone.

Since 2018, Trump has endured a string of losses that should bury the idea that Trump somehow defies gravity in politics and business. The latest smackdown is his conviction in a New York City criminal trial on 34 counts of falsifying business records related to the notorious Stormy Daniels hush money payment right before the 2016 election. A jury found that a series of checks Trump signed to cover the payment were falsely labeled as legal expenses on his company's books, amounting to criminal felonies.

Trump could face jail time if his appeal fails to overturn the verdict, but it seems more likely he'll get off with probation. But jail time is still a possibility in three other criminal trials where Trump faces more than 50 additional criminal charges. He also faces astronomical legal bills.

Trump will get a much-needed win in July, when the Republican Party is due to make him their official candidate in the 2024 presidential race. But his mounting record as a serial loser should worry supporters. Here are seven other prominent examples:

The 2018 midterm elections. Voter disgust with Trump in the second year of his presidency helped Democrats flip 40 seats and recapture the House of Representatives from Trump’s Republican party. While it’s normal for the president’s party to lose ground in the midterms, exit polls in 2018 revealed unusually high levels of opposition to Trump, which fueled record turnout. Control of the House allowed Democrats to block Trump’s legislative agenda for the last two years of his presidency.

The 2020 presidential election. Trump was the first incumbent to lose a reelection bid since George H. W. Bush in 1992.

The 2020 Senate race. Control of the Senate in the 2020 election came down to two runoff races in Georgia that weren’t concluded until early January 2021. Two Democratic challengers ended up beating two incumbent Republicans, an improbable Hollywood ending for Democrats that gave them a one-vote majority and control of both houses of Congress. Many analysts, including Republicans, blamed Trump’s election denialism and his squabbling with fellow Republicans for the Georgia Senate losses. Those two Senate seats allowed Democrats to pass a huge stimulus bill in 2021 and a massive set of green energy incentives in 2022 that never would have happened had Republicans kept control of the Senate.