Donald Trump's election campaign announced yesterday, Tuesday, that the former Republican president will appear before the public on January 28, as part of his bid to run for the 2024 presidential elections, in South Carolina;

One of the early voting states, for the first time since announcing his intention to run last November.

And a campaign announcement stated that two well-known Republican symbols in South Carolina are scheduled to join Trump at the statehouse, where he unveils his campaign leadership team in the state, namely Senator Lindsey Graham, one of Trump's most loyal supporters, and Governor Henry McMaster.

South Carolina wields significant clout as one of the first states to witness presidential contests in election years.

It is reported that Trump faces charges of storming his supporters into the Congressional Building on January 6, 2021, as a parliamentary investigation committee voted into storming Congress last December 19 - after an extensive investigation that lasted about a year and a half - in favor of making recommendations for 4 criminal charges. Trump to the Department of Justice.

The charges are obstruction of Congress, conspiracy to defraud the US government, conspiracy to make false statements, and mutiny.

Trump accused the investigation committee of seeking to prevent him from running for the upcoming presidential elections in 2024, by recommending that the Ministry of Justice file "false accusations" against him.

He said in a post on his social networking platform, "Truth Social," that "all these actions aimed at pursuing me are similar to my impeachment trial, a partisan attempt to exclude me and the Republican Party" from the upcoming presidential elections.

Last Friday, a US court in Manhattan fined the Trump Organization (owned by the former president's family) $1.6 million for convicting it of financial and tax irregularities, after the jury found - last month - two Trump Organization companies guilty of 17 criminal charges.

Trump has repeatedly denied committing financial wrongdoing, and has declined to publish his tax returns, breaking a tradition followed by all his predecessors since the 1970s.

Which raised many questions about its content.