New report details Trumps extraordinary effort to overturn election result
Washington: A report by the Senate Judiciary Committeeâs Democratic majority details Donald Trumpâs extraordinary effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election that he lost, with the Justice Department brought to the brink of chaos and top officials there and at the White House threatening to resign.
The report, released on Thursday local time, offers new insight about how the Republican incumbent tried to undo the vote and exert his will on the department, asking leaders to declare the election âcorruptâ and disparaging its top official for not doing anything to overturn the results.
Officials told former president Donald Trump, pictured, that they would resign if he put Jeffrey Clark in charge at the Justice Department.Credit:AP
Trumpâs actions led to a near-revolt at department headquarters that receded only after senior officials warned of a mass resignation, with one White House lawyer describing the efforts to undo the election as a âmurder-suicide pactâ.
âIn attempting to enlist DOJ for personal, political purposes in an effort to maintain his hold on the White House, Trump grossly abused the power of the presidencyâ and arguably violated a federal law that prevents anyone from commanding that federal employees engage in political activity, the report says.
While the broad outlines of what took place after the November 3 election have long been known, the Senate investigation based on a review of documents and interviews with former officials lays bare the extent of Trumpâs all-out campaign to remain in the White House. It shows how Trump benefited from the support of a little-known Justice Department lawyer who championed the then-presidentâs efforts to challenge the vote but how, in the end, other senior officials stood together to face down Trump. The outcome suggests how reliant the fragile US election system is on the integrity of government officials.
Trumpâs effort, now the subject of a Justice Department inspector general investigation, did not succeed and Biden took office on January 20. Even so, the false claims over the election have fractured the nation, with millions of Americans wrongly believing the contest was stolen.
Rage about the election compelled a mass of Trump supporters to violently storm the Capitol on January 6 in an effort to disrupt the congressional certification of Bidenâs victory. The rioters beat and bloodied an overwhelmed police force, sent lawmakers running for their lives and caused $US1 million ($1.37 million) in damage. More than 630 people have been charged criminally in the riot, the largest prosecution in Justice Department history.
Republicans, who have mostly stayed loyal to Trump since the insurrection, issued their own report that downplays the concerns raised by Democrats and paints Trump as a hero who ignored suggestions by an assistant attorney-general, Jeffrey Clark, and who refused to fire top Justice Department officials. Their rebuttal makes the astonishing claim that Trump was concerned about the election system writ large and not about himself, even though he was publicly fighting to stay in office and pressured vice-president Mike Pence to help him.
The Democratsâ report chronicles Trumpâs relentless prodding of the Justice Department during a turbulent stretch in late December and early January to investigate suspected voter fraud and to support his efforts to undo the results. Trump had laid the groundwork for that effort even before the election when he attacked the vote-by-mail process.
But he escalated it significantly after election day and particularly after the December resignation of attorney-general William Barr, who weeks before he left the Justice Department told The Associated Press that the department had not found fraud that could affect the outcome of the election.
In one White House meeting recounted for Senate investigators, Jeffrey Rosen, who served as Barrâs deputy and briefly led the department after Barr left, described how Trump, in an effort to initiate a department inquiry, showed videos of âsomebody delivering a suitcase of ballotsâ.
Rosen said he recalled saying to Trump, âI really want to suggest to you, sir, respectfully, that it would be a better thing for everyone to use this last month to focus on some of the things that had been accomplished in the last four years â" tax reform and the vaccine, Operation Warp Speed, and not go into this âthe election was corruptâ.â
The pressure campaign by Trump and his allies included a draft brief the White House wanted the Justice Department to file with the Supreme Court to overturn the election results. The department refused to file the document, which the Senate report describes as raising a âlitany of false and debunked claimsâ.
The conflict culminated in a contentious, hours-long meeting at the White House on January 3 in which Trump openly considered replacing Rosen as acting attorney-general with Clark, an assistant attorney general. The Democratsâ report says Trump told Rosen: âOne thing we know is you, Rosen, arenât going to do anything to overturn the election.â
Clark had positioned himself as more sympathetic to pursuing Trumpâs fraud claims even though the results were certified by states and Republican election officials. Courts rejected dozens of legal challenges to the election and Barr, Trumpâs own attorney-general, had said Biden won fairly.
Clark declined to be interviewed voluntarily by the committee.
But several officials in the January 3 meeting told Trump they would resign if he put Clark in charge at the Justice Department. According to witnesses interviewed by the Senate committeeâs majority staff, White House counsel Pat Cipollone referred to a draft letter from Clark pushing Georgia officials to convene a special legislative session on the election results as a âmurder-suicide pact.â Cipollone threatened to quit.
Richard Donoghue, who was Rosenâs deputy at the time, replied there was âno chanceâ he would sign that letter or âanything remotely like thatâ. Donoghue told the committee that he told Trump that all of the assistant attorneys-general, and perhaps US attorneys and other senior department officials, would resign en masse if the president were to replace Rosen with Clark.
Georgia emerged as a particular area of focus for Trump, who sought the removal of the top prosecutor in Atlanta, BJay Pak, claiming that he was a ânever Trumper,â according to the report. Pak had originally planned to stay on in the position until Inauguration Day, January 20, but resigned weeks earlier than that because of the pressure from Trump.
Besides Clark, Trump found another ally in Republican Scott Perry, who has disputed the validity of Bidenâs victory in Pennsylvania and called Donoghue on December 27 to say the department wasnât doing its job with respect to the elections. Perry encouraged Donoghue to call on Clark to help because heâs âthe kind of guy who could really get in there and do something about this,â according to the report.
AP
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