May 30, 2024

Will Trump's conviction sway voters? Some offer first reactions

WATCH: Trump's hush money trial: Biggest takeaways

A big question hovering over Donald Trump's guilty verdicts is whether it will make a difference with voters come November.

Several voters from across the country spoke with ABC News in the moments following Trump's conviction, sharing their initial thoughts on the news and how it affects their views of the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.

Richard Paddock, a Republican businessman from New Hampshire, supported Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in the primary and was lukewarm about voting for Trump. But now, he says his support for Trump has only solidified.

"This outcome has now hardened my support to vote for Trump," Paddock said. "I'm now all in for Trump!"

MORE: How Trump's guilty verdict will impact the 2024 presidential election

Jack LaFrankie, a 25-year-old conservative who recently moved to Nashville, Tennessee, said he voted for Nikki Haley in the primaries, but became undecided when she dropped out of the GOP presidential primaries. He said he was torn between voting for Biden or Trump, but the that the verdict made him lean toward a Trump vote in November.

"I didn't know how I'd feel about this [verdict] until it happened, and it makes me want to vote for him more than I did yesterday," LaFrankie said.

Steven Hirsch-Pool/Getty Images
Former President Donald Trump walks to go speak to the media after being found guilty following his hush money trial at Manhattan Criminal Court, May 30, 2024, in New York .

But other GOP voters had the opposite reaction.

Matthew Labkovski, a 26-year-old Republican medical student in South Florida, was torn between supporting President Joe Biden, Trump or a third-party candidate after backing Haley in the primary. After Thursday's verdict, he's choosing between voting for Biden or not voting at all.

"It's crazy that we have a former president as a felon," Labkovski said. "I think it's just a sad day for U.S. politics, but hope it inspires change in everyone ... [I'm] more likely not to vote for him now."

MORE: Can Trump still be elected president after being convicted in hush money case?

Non-Republican voters also weighed in on the verdict.

Mark, a 37-year-old private investigator from Miami, is an independent voter who said the verdict made that decision not to vote for Trump clear for him.

Seth Wenig/Pool via Reuters
Former President Donald Trump returns to the courtroom at Manhattan Criminal Court, May 30, 2024, in New York.

"It was [an] option, it was possible, but now it's like no, it's not [an] option," he said of voting for Trump.

"Who knows what else is gonna come out? At the end of the day, once you've been brought up on charges, when you get charged that much, there's probably gonna be a lot more," Mark added.

Jamie Savoy, a 38-year-old Democrat, voted for Biden in 2020 and was considering voting for Trump. She called the verdict a "shock and disappointment."

"It does feel like it's going to influence my decision," she said, noting she hasn't "100% ruled" out voting for him but is "less sure than before."

ABC News' Hannah Demissie contributed to this report.