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Despite the fact that Donald Trump left the United States Presidency three weeks ago, the decisions he made in office, especially after the November 3 elections, continue to dominate the news landscape of the world's leading power.

This Wednesday the 'political trial' in the Senate continued,

with the exhibition, by the Democratic majority that acts as the prosecutor in the process, of more 'tweets' from the president and, also, of unpublished videos recorded by the cameras of Capitol security.

The Democratic thesis is that Trump not only incited the jump to the Capitol but also

acted with premeditation.

The images are part of a message more oriented to public opinion than to the Republican opposition, among which Trump has enough support to exercise a blocking minority that prevents him from being found guilty.

At the end of this chronicle, the president's defense had not yet intervened.

His strategy seems confused, after the Trump team performed poorly at the opening of the trial on Tuesday, which earned the president's two attorneys, David Schoen and Bruce Castor, criticism from Republicans and his own client.

As reported yesterday by the 'Politico' website, citing people around Trump,

"the president is not satisfied" with the defense

he is having.

Yesterday there was even speculation about possible changes in Trump's legal team.

doing so would be extremely unusual.

But, if something characterizes the former president, it is his ability to break with conventions.

The former president, however, depends on spokesmen and third parties to convey his message.

Trump does not have access to social networks

, especially Twitter, which have been his main vehicle for communication.

And it will continue without having it.

That company announced yesterday that the suspension of the president's account is permanent.

Facebook, for its part, has opted for a Solomonic solution, and, although it has expelled Trump along with most of the accounts of the QAnon conspiracy, which advocates that the world is controlled by a network of anthropophagous pedophiles against whom it fights - or fought - the former president alone, has not made a final decision.

An independent council of the company, which includes, among others, former British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, will have to establish what the social network of Mark Zuckerberg, who in the past has defended Donald Trump publicly, does.

Trump also has a new open legal front.

Authorities have launched a criminal investigation into whether the president's call to Georgia's Secretary of State

Brad Raffespenger

in January, asking him to "find" the votes he needed to win elections in that state is constitutive of crime.

This process is in addition to the cases opened against Trump in the state of New York for an alleged tax offense in his time as a businessman.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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TechnologyFacebook will stop recommending political groups to its users

Technology Twitter suspends more than 70,000 accounts with content about the pro-Trump movement, Qanon

Social networksThe veto on Amazon's servers deactivates Parler, the social network of Trump's ultras followers

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