âGuilty on all counts,â is the headline on the Guardianâs front page on Friday, after Donald Trump was found guilty on all 34 counts of falsifying business records in a historic criminal hush-money trial.
It took the jury less than 12 hours to reach a verdict in the unprecedented first criminal trial against a current or former US president.
On the big question of whether the verdict will affect the outcome of Novemberâs presidential election â in which poll after poll shows Trump to be the marginal favourite over incumbent Joe Biden â the paperâs Washington bureau chief David Smith is clear: âIf this doesnât do it, perhaps nothing will.â
The headline is no less historic in the New York Times, the paper of record in a city that for years was intertwined with the image of the former president, and is now the site of his conviction.
In an opinion piece, published after the verdict, the paperâs editorial board offered the blunt assessment that âThe juryâs decision, and the facts presented at the trial, offer yet another reminder â perhaps the starkest to date â of the many reasons Donald Trump is unfit for office.
âThe greatest good to come out of this sordid case is the proof that the rule of law binds everyone, even former presidents.â
Germanyâs Der Spiegel has a characteristically creative headline with the world âGuilty!â repeated 34 times; one for every count on which the former president was convicted.
Weekly magazine the New Yorker worked at record speed to turn around this cover for its next edition.
David Remnick, the magazineâs editor, says that the conviction is âonly the most recent stain on the legal history of the former presidentâ, but goes on to note that despite his guilt in this case, the final judgment will be made by voters in November.
Under its headline, the Washington Post carries comment from senior critic-at-large, Robin Givhan, who says âbless the Trump jury, not for the verdict but for their serviceâ.
âAt a time when Americans can barely agree on whether the sky is blue or the grass is green, five women and seven men, all strangers until two months ago, agreed that former president Donald Trump was guiltyâ, she writes.
The Times in the UK says âTrump found guilty in hush money trialâ. The paper notes that the trial has fallen in the midst of a campaign that could return him to the White House âmonths after a judge has decided whether or not to send him to jailâ.
âOpinion polls have suggested that a criminal conviction could put off some votersâ, the paperâs correspondent Will Pavia notes from New York, before adding that many political strategists âdoubt whether it will have an effect in Novemberâ.
The Telegraph notes that Trump â along with Joe Biden – launched a fundraising push after the verdict, with the former presidentâs request for donations reading: âI am a political prisoner!â
But while analysis from the paperâs deputy US editor notes that the conviction is the biggest moment in any presidential race âin living memoryâ, it goes on to say that if Bidenâs campaign âbelieves this will secure their victory, they may be left disappointed.â
Under an image of Trump with Stormy Daniels, the adult film star who gave evidence during the trial, the Mirrorâs headline reads simply âTrump guiltyâ.
A separate article â under the headline âHeâs Don forâ â describes the presidentâs ârageâ after he was convicted.
The New York Post, the tabloid that has historically been a supporter of Trump but which in recent years has developed a more complicated relationship with him, leads with a picture of him looking sullen after the verdict on Thursday.
The paperâs editorial board is scathing of the verdict, however, publishing an opinion piece under the headline âTrump falls victim to a prostituted court of law â more reason for the court of public opinion to vote out Biden in Novemberâ.
Finally, the Daily Star had its own unique take, referencing an iconic UK ad from the 1990s, under the headline âYouâve been Tangoâdâ.