The entire case is a politically driven farce. If you are getting your hopes up of a conviction, you are setting yourself up for disappointment.
The same goes for any hopes this would damage Trump politically.
I agree that the case is politically driven. But people have been making claims that are inaccurate or at least very questionable about the law and Constitution and seem to be setting themselves up for disappointment when rulings don’t go their way.
Ultimately I think the court will find that he PRA controls the issue of presidential records and the espionage charges will get tossed. It’s the process crimes where I think Trump may have more exposure - hiding documents from a subpoena, falsely certifying that all documents had been turned over, having boxes removed so they could not be searched for documents responsive to the subpoena, etc. Even if the PRA is the controlling authority, once the subpoena was issued and upheld, attempting to circumvent or avoid compliance is its own crime, though usually contempt of court. There are defenses Trump can raise - since disputes under the PRA are a civil matter, should failure to comply with the subpoena be obstruction or contempt? Unfortunately, it may take getting to an appeals court to win that argument, which means Trump could get convicted before any ultimate vindication.