Why Is Trump Worried About What Mark Meadows Might Say in the Election Interference Cases?
The former White House chief of staff is one of several former Trump advisers who are cooperating with prosecutors.

Three lawyers who were charged in the Georgia racketeering case against Donald Trump, which stems from his efforts to reverse the outcome of the 2020 presidential election, recently pleaded guilty to lesser charges and agreed to testify for the prosecution. Meanwhile, ABC News reports that Mark Meadows, Trump's chief of staff during the last two years of his administration, has been cooperating with Special Counsel Jack Smith in the federal case that charges Trump with three conspiracy counts based on much of the same conduct described in the Georgia indictment.
These former Trump insiders could provide evidence that would illuminate the former president's knowledge and intent, which are crucial to proving the state and federal charges that accuse him of illegally interfering in the election. Smith and Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney Fani Willis argue that Trump knew he had lost the election but nevertheless attempted to overturn Joe Biden's victory through means he knew were illegal. Trump's lawyers say he sincerely believed (and still believes) that he was a victim of massive election fraud and, based on the legal advice he received, that the remedies he pursued were legitimate.
What does Meadows have to say that might shed light on those conflicting claims? He facilitated much of the conduct described in both indictments, which was based on election fraud allegations he now says he recognized as baseless by mid-December 2020. Meadows is not charged in the federal case but is one of Trump's 17 co-defendants in the Georgia indictment. He was granted immunity to testify before the grand jury in the federal case, and he also sat for interviews with Smith's investigators.
Trump certainly seems worried about what Meadows might say on the stand. In a Truth Social post on Tuesday, Trump noted that Meadows was under a lot of pressure to cooperate with prosecutors in exchange for immunity.* "Some people would make that deal, but they are weaklings and cowards, and so bad for the future our Failing Nation," Trump wrote. "I don't think that Mark Meadows is one of them, but who really knows?"
One reason for Trump's concern is that Meadows reportedly has repudiated the former president's claim that Biden stole the election. In his 2021 memoir The Chief's Chief, Meadows was still embracing the gist of Trump's stolen-election fantasy. "I was well aware that this sounded like a conspiracy theory," he wrote. "In a sense, that was all part of the Democrats' game. The people who rigged this election knew that eventually, these irregularities would come to light….They conducted the operation, then attacked anyone who dared ask questions about what they had done." He complained that Biden's "allies in the liberal media" ignored "actual evidence of fraud, right there in plain sight for anyone to access and analyze," and he noted that Trump had charged Rudy Giuliani, among others, with "tell[ing] the country" about "the fraud" and "the dirty tricks" that supposedly had "rigged" the election.
But according to ABC News, which cites "sources familiar with the matter," Meadows was singing a different tune when he was interviewed by federal prosecutors. He reportedly said Trump was "dishonest" in claiming victory before the votes had been counted on election night, even while complaining about "a major fraud" aimed at concealing that result. "Obviously we didn't win," Meadows reportedly told Smith's team, saying he had never seen any evidence of fraud on a scale that would have changed the outcome. In "mid-to-late November," former Trump campaign lawyer Alex Cannon has said, he told Meadows that "we weren't finding anything that would be sufficient to change the results in any of the key states." According to ABC's sources, Meadows said he shared that conclusion with Trump by mid-December, informing him that "Giuliani hadn't produced any evidence to back up the many allegations he was making."
Several other advisers, including then–Attorney General Bill Barr, privately delivered the same assessment to Trump around the same time. Did Trump take it to heart? After the Supreme Court turned away his final election challenge on December 11, 2020, Meadows reportedly told investigators, Trump said something to the effect of "then that's the end" or "so that's it."
Was Trump admitting that Biden had won the election, or merely that the Trump campaign's litigation had failed? "While speaking with investigators, Meadows was specifically asked if Trump ever acknowledged to him that he'd lost the election," ABC News says. "Meadows told investigators he never heard Trump say that, according to sources." And according to Barr, Trump continued to privately insist that systematic fraud had denied him his rightful victory.
Whatever misgivings Meadows may have had about Trump's attempts to validate that contention, they did not stop him from setting up the notorious telephone call in which Trump pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to "find" the votes he needed to claim that state's electoral votes. Trump raised one unsubstantiated fraud claim after another and seemed utterly unfazed by Raffensperger's rebuttals. That conversation happened on January 2, 2021, four days before Trump supporters who believed his phony grievance rioted at the U.S. Capitol.
Meadows, who reportedly told Smith's team that he considered resigning as chief of staff but decided to stay on to ensure a peaceful transition, has publicly said that he was trying to resolve Trump's complaints about the election in Georgia and that his role in the call was limited to introducing the participants, which is consistent with the transcript. The Georgia indictment nevertheless alleges that Meadows solicited Raffensperger to violate his oath of office, a felony punishable by one to three years in prison. He also faces a racketeering count, punishable by five to 20 years in prison, for allegedly participating in an "enterprise" aimed at illegally keeping Trump in power.
In addition to the phone call with Raffensperger, the indictment cites several other "overt acts in furtherance of the conspiracy" that involved Meadows. They include communications and meetings with state legislators and election officials whom Trump was trying to enlist in his cause and Meadows' attempt to observe a "signature match audit" in Cobb County, Georgia, on December 22, 2020. Some of this conduct happened after Meadows, per ABC's sources, had concluded that Trump's fraud claims were unfounded. But unless Meadows rejects Trump's warning and decides to plead guilty in Georgia, he surely will argue that he was merely doing his job by trying to allay his boss's concerns.
Whether those concerns were sincere is another matter. The evidence on that question is mixed, but it is largely consistent with the hypothesis that Trump was convinced he had won the election, stubbornly discounted all the evidence to the contrary, and listened only to advisers who told him what he wanted to hear. Judging from the ABC News report, Meadows' testimony would underline the unreasonableness of Trump's avowed belief that the election was stolen, although it would not provide direct evidence that Trump was deliberately perpetrating a scam.
What about Sidney Powell, one of the Georgia defendants who has agreed to testify for the prosecution? Powell, a lawyer who was initially identified as a member of the Trump campaign's "elite strike force team," assiduously promoted an elaborate conspiracy theory that claimed Biden had stolen the election through a combination of deliberately corrupted voting machines and phony ballot dumps. Even after the campaign officially separated itself from her, she still had the president's ear, and he and Giuliani continued to tell essentially the same story.
Powell has gone back and forth about the veracity of that story, which she pushed in numerous TV appearances and post-election lawsuits. Although she promised to "release the Kraken" of evidence that would prove her claims, that beast never materialized. And in defending her against the resulting defamation lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems, her lawyers argued that "no reasonable person would conclude that the statements were truly statements of fact," noting that the company itself had described her claims as "wild" and "outlandish." Powell subsequently backtracked from that apparent admission, promising to "expose what really happened."
Then Powell backtracked from her backtracking. Fighting professional sanctions based on Powell's frivolous litigation in Michigan, her lawyers said she was merely echoing her clients' concerns. "Millions of Americans believe the central contentions of the complaint to be true," the lawyers said on her behalf, "and perhaps they are." Or perhaps not.
Powell still (or again) seems to lean toward the former assessment. Her account on X (formerly Twitter) includes a pinned post showing a graph that is meant to support claims of fraud in Fulton County, and on Sunday she shared an X post about a survey finding that "almost half of Democrat voters say that it is very likely or somewhat likely that cheating affected the outcome of the 2020 election."
In the Georgia case, Powell pleaded guilty to six misdemeanor counts of intentionally interfering with public officials' election duties. Those charges stemmed from her arrangement with SullivanStrickler, a forensic data firm that copied election software and ballot records at the Board of Elections and Registration Office in Coffee County, Georgia, the day after the Capitol riot. That was part of Powell's fruitless efforts to show that tricky election software had switched Trump votes to Biden votes.
Under her plea agreement, Powell will avoid prison and a criminal record if she successfully completes six years of probation and testifies truthfully in the upcoming racketeering trials of Trump and the other defendants. Powell's history of peddling "wild" and "outlandish" fraud claims could be a problem for prosecutors trying to present her as a credible witness. Her on-again, off-again status as a true believer also could complicate the government's case. More to the point, while Powell can confirm some of the "overt acts" described in the indictment and may be able to shed light on Trump's motivation in pushing the stolen-election narrative, it is not clear that she has any knowledge of whether Trump actually believed that narrative.
Jenna Ellis, a former Trump campaign lawyer who pleaded guilty in Georgia this week, appeared alongside Powell and Giuliani at the bizarre November 19, 2020, press conference where they laid out their election conspiracy theory. Like Meadows, Ellis was charged with both racketeering and soliciting the violation of a public officer's oath—in her case, based on her participation in a hearing aimed at persuading Georgia legislators to recognize Trump's electors instead of Biden's. Also like Meadows, Ellis figures in several "overt acts" listed in the indictment, including that crazy press conference, meetings and phone calls aimed at persuading state legislators to recognize Trump's "alternate" electors, and memorandums arguing that Vice President Mike Pence had the authority to block or delay congressional ratification of Biden's victory.
Ellis pleaded guilty to a felony charge of aiding and abetting false statements and writings, referring to baseless election fraud claims during a Georgia Senate hearing in which she participated. Like Powell, she won't go to jail as long as she testifies truthfully for the prosecution. "As an attorney who is also a Christian, I take my responsibilities as a lawyer very seriously and I endeavor to be a person of sound moral and ethical character in all of my dealings," a tearful Ellis said upon entering her guilty plea on Tuesday. But when she participated in Trump's efforts to remain in office, she said, "I failed to do my due diligence….I relied on others, including lawyers with many more years of experience than I, to provide me with true and reliable information….What I did not do, but should have done, your honor, was to make sure that the facts the other lawyers alleged to be true were, in fact, true."
This was not Ellis' first admission that she erred by promoting Trump's fraud claims. Last March, in response to a professional complaint against her in Colorado, Ellis admitted that she had made 10 "misrepresentations" while "serving as counsel for the Trump campaign and personal counsel to President Trump." But she insisted those were honest mistakes and complained that "the politically-motivated Left" was "trying to falsely discredit me by saying I admitted I lied." Not so, she said: "I would NEVER lie. Lying requires INTENTIONALLY making a false statement."
Trump, who was told over and over again that his claims had not panned out and reportedly laughed at some elements of Powell's conspiracy theory, may have a harder time asserting that defense. But if we accept Ellis' assertion that she had no reason to doubt the president's claims, it seems unlikely that she ever heard him express reservations about them.
Ellis' testimony could, however, undermine Trump's defense that he reasonably relied on his lawyers' advice in pursuing the "alternate" electors scheme and pressuring Pence to intervene in the electoral vote count on January 6, 2021. As she describes it, any lawyer who performed "due diligence" would have recognized that such remedies had no empirical basis. The implication is that the "lawyers with many more years of experience" on whom she relied, presumably including Giuliani and John Eastman (another Georgia racketeering defendant), pressed fraud allegations they should have known had no merit.
"There is no question that a swarm of MAGA lawyers surrounded Trump at each step of the process," New York Times columnist David French writes, "but if the lawyers themselves have admitted to engaging in criminal conduct, then that weakens his legal defense. This was no normal legal team, and their conduct was far outside the bounds of normal legal representation."
The remaining lawyer defendants surely will contest that characterization. Kenneth Chesebro, the third lawyer who has agreed to testify in the Georgia trials, originally faced a racketeering charge and six additional felony counts related to the "alternate" electors plan. Like Ellis, he wrote legal memos in support of that scheme. He pleaded guilty to one felony count of conspiracy to file false documents, which prosecutors said was based on his creation and distribution of "false Electoral College documents" to Trump allies in Georgia. But after his guilty plea, CNBC reported, his lawyer "said it was inaccurate to describe Chesebro as the architect of a plan to subvert democracy."
That statement can be interpreted in a couple of ways: as casting blame on other strategists, such as Giuliani and Eastman, or as denying that there was anything improper about presenting "contingent" electors in case Trump's Georgia election lawsuit proved successful. Giuliani and Eastman are bound to raise the latter argument in support of their contention that their advice to Trump was not "far outside the bounds of normal legal representation." But Chesebro's guilty plea, which on its face concedes that promoting the "alternate" electors was illegal, will make that harder.
*CORRECTION: This post has been revised to clarify that Trump was talking about Meadows' reported immunity deal in the federal case.
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Long winded defense of these prosecutions that you even defended Hunter against with overcharging for pleas.
No Jail time. Minimal fees. Records expungement. No proffer.
Yet you think this is the smoking gun Sullum. And you don't criticize the state going and adding charges against obvious free speech and petitions of government. You've given up your principles that you brought out to support Hunter. This shows a bias in your coverage.
You also are inferring that Trump being told by someone proves Trump's beliefs or knowledge. This is not a libertarian take in any manner. Every day people here tell you are wrong. Imagine you were charged based on knowingly lying about your posts because people pointed out your fallacies and issues with your posts. This is what they are trying to get out of Meadows.
Petitioning government is not illegal. Challenging elections is not illegal.
Yet you continue to provide cover and tacit approval for these actions. Where the left is going as far as trying to debar Trump's lawyers, removing his right to council, overcharging to get news generating headlines, etc. All because you dislike someone. Truly principled.
you even defended Hunter
BUT HUNTER BIDENS PENIS! is the wingnut reply to anything.
No wonder you and sarc are best buds now. Defend the state with nonsense.
You went straight to BUT HUNTER!
That fake scandal is played out, numbnuts.
Your such shitty shill, but somehow you think it's a winner to try and pretend that the biggest bribery scandal in US history can be handwaved away by pretending it's about dick pics.
How you haven't been fired yet for gross incompetence is beyond me.
Now go ahead and claim that "there's no eViDenCe" again. I've got a link filled copypasta I wrote just for you, and I'm itching to use it.
Incompetence is the primary requirement to be hired by act blue. They don't want intelligent debate. They want to throw shit to ruin the debate.
Steve Bannon would like a word...
Jared Kushner got two orders of magnitude more from the Saudis than Hunter Biden got from all his business deals.
But grifting is okay if you are related to Saint Donald.
No. I didn’t. I pointed out sullums hypocrisy of his two articles.
But we know you don’t read.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
So. Fucking. Retarded.
Sullum is sad that even his mother hates him
Sullum has again proven a partisan hack, not to be taken seriously.
KNW, fire this POS!
New York Times columnist David French writes, "but if the lawyers themselves have admitted to engaging in criminal conduct, then that weakens his legal defense.
French, another hack, is suggesting one should go against legal advice. I’m sure if anyone went against the advice French would call him out for intentionally doing something illegal.
Let’s face it, Trump got conflicting advice, some of which was sycophantic BS. He believed what he liked. Not a crime, just dumb.
What makes all of this worse is that so many, in the "legal" profession, elevated to positions where impartiality is expected, have abandoned those principles, and gone full-on TDS, to make rulings that defy logic, even to the extent that they will subvert the very bedrock principles of every defendant having the right to legal counsel, and that what that counsel recommends can be a crime for the client to act upon.
Such things were unheard of, in the times before their fear elicited this derangement, due to a perceived existential threat, that Trump represented.
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Needs more commas. Sorry, but that was distracting.
You mean judges, even ones appointed by Trump himself. Why did Trump appoint "TDS-addled" judges?
"Petitioning government is not illegal. Challenging elections is not illegal." Correct.
You keep repeating this line in multiple threads. But you leave out some rather important details. Trump's campaign DID "petition the government" and "challenge the election" in court. In multiple states with multiple lawsuits. GOP allies and attorney generals did the same. Those efforts ultimately proved unsuccessful.
Trump isn't being charged for filing legal challenges to the election results - even though some were so frivolous the lawyers involved were sanctioned. Its what steps were taken when the legal challenges failed. Acting like those failed legal challenges don't exist really destroys the whole point of your argument.
Yeah and you leave out that Trump facilitated the peaceful transfer of power and left the white house on schedule.
He "facilitated" it by not being physically dragged out of the White House...
Give him a medal!
So why has Hillary Clinton et al escaped prosecution for insisting the 2016 election was stolen from her? I don't recall that her statements have ever even been investigated.
pleaded guilty to a felony charge of aiding and abetting false statements and writings
Hil-Dog didn't hatch a fraudulent hare-brain scheme to overturn the election.
Yes, she did.
She commissioned an intelligence dossier to lend support for the claim that Trump colluded with the Russians®™ to steal the 2016 election. She then hid the source of the funding.
Her election team also advocated for electors to go against their state votes.
Not just that, but to actually get intelligence agencies to debrief the electors on whom they should vote for.
So what was the Steele Dossier and providing phony documents to the Trump Russia investigation then?
Seems to me faking documents and lying to congress is a far bigger fraudulent hare-brain scheme than trying to challenge it in court.
turd, the TDS-addled ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Hillary Clinton and Trump both have a right to complain about election results, that is 1A. Neither has a right to take criminal actions to try to overturn results. Hillary took no actions, Trump did take criminal actions. It is that simple.
Drafting a dossier and providing fake electors is not action?
Partisan Fool.
Let me know when you come up with something real.
Why are you asking us/Sullum/Reason?
Trump had four years to do that, and chose not to. Ask him.
>>In a Truth Social post on Tuesday ...
post is calling Meadows a pussy castoff, not Trump certainly seems worried about what Meadows might say on the stand.
If Trump wasn't scared shitless, he wouldn't mention Meadows at all.
One more lying pile of TDS-addled shit heard from.
Anybody should be scared when a corrupt leftist prosecutor abuses the law to try to destroy them. Trump is actually holding up remarkably well, all things considered.
You, of course, love the Stalinist-like destruction of political enemies; you thrive on it, EdG.
Trump is worried Meadows will mouth the lies they are feeding him to save his skin.
Trump is terrified that Meadows will tell the truth.
The people Trump threw under the bus are going to take him down. Poetic justice. He would throw you under the bus too if he could.
Man, when you throw charges big and wide enough, it's amazing who comes out of the woodwork to testify against you.
Great article.
That was 10 years ago almost before Reason was reborn as Teen Reason.
“These former Trump insiders could provide evidence that would illuminate the former president's knowledge and intent”
Does Sullum imagine Trump actually told Meadows he really believed he lost? Seems he would know that’s unlikely regardless of what actually happened. Otherwise his opinion on Trump’s “intent” is bullshit.
“Trump certainly seems worried about what Meadows might say on the stand. In a Truth Social post on Tuesday, Trump…”
Does Sullum imagine that every time Trump makes a post like this he’s worried? That would indicate Sullum imagines Trump lives in a near constant state of worry, because that’s a pretty typical post by Trump.
The answer to these questions is no, Sullum does not really imagine these things to be true. You can make your own decisions about what Sullum is for yourself based off this. Personally I appreciate that Sullum regularly exposes himself for what he is so early in his pieces so I don’t need to bother reading the rest of it.
Sullum imagines that with enough blackmail, Meadows can be coerced to make a false statement that could be unfavorable to Trump. And Sullum likes it.
Blackmail is clearly the only reason why anyone would testify against St. Trump.
Lamestream media bias against Republicans:
George Santos told a NYT reporter his niece was kidnapped by Chinese Communists, but an official said he 'made it up'
https://www.businessinsider.com/santos-said-his-niece-was-kidnapped-official-said-he-made-it-up-2023-10
Hardly any coverage on this kidnapping!
He told a reporter!!!
That's practically filing a false report.
Say Pluggo, is that like saying you fought a gang leader named "Corn Pop" in the 1960s? Or that you were "appointed" to the Naval Academy? Or that you were arrested in South Africa with Nelson Mandela? Or arrested during the civil rights movement? Or that you were once a professional truck driver? Or you were raised in the Puerto Rican community? Or that your home almost burned down and "we almost lost a couple firefighters" when lightning struck?
Or that your your son died fighting in Iraq……
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a TDS-addled lying pile of lefty shit.
Prosecutors have brought bogus charges, and they are trying to use plea deals to coerce people to make up bogus statements that hurt Trump. This is a corrupt, politicized justice system in full swing. It's as simple as that. That's what Trump is "worried about".
As usual, NoBoyz wrote a meaningless comment with zero facts.
You're worried that he's taking your crown, worthless pile of shit?
As usual, EdG is too ignorant and dumb to engage in a rational discussion, or even to understand the difference between an argument and a statement of facts.
It's certainly as simple as something...
This is all you got?
And you’re writing the rest as if Meadows can’t be singing a different tune because he’s willing to throw Trump under the bus to make this all go away?
Your assumption going in here, Sullum, is that Trump is dishonest – but everyone around him was totally honest. And thus Meadows’ statements about Trump are honest (because they affirm your assumptions about Trump) and not that he’s turned and willing to lie and exaggerate in order to get the pressure off him? That this might be costing him tons of money he can’t afford to spend on legal fees so he’s going to lie to save what he can?
And then there’s the assumption that the GA case *has* anything. Some podunk prosecutor in what you would otherwise consider ‘the trash south’?
Sullums article is a great example of someone turning into any rationalization to abuse their prior principles.
It's not an assumption that Trump is dishonest. It's a fact.
One more lying pile of TDS-addled shit.
No more than any other politician.
So you agree it's a fact?
Trump is possibly the most open and transparent President in ages. You always know what he wants, he tells you over and over. He often wants idiotic things, he's an economic ignoramus, but to give Trump an F on honesty is to give a Z to almost every other politician who has ever lived, from Babylonia to the present.
Trump is possibly the most open and transparent President in ages.
I agree, but it's only because Trump's lies are easier to spot, both because he doesn't get cover from media/establishment and because he assumes everyone is dumber than he is so he's very bad at lying. He probably lies more than any president ever, but it's mostly harmless self flattering lies as opposed to covering up corruption or starting wars. Also his personality disorder probably makes him believe his own lies so by the Costanza rule, it's not a lie. That is probably the case with his stolen election narrative.
Trump has the whole establishment against him, but that doesn't make him honest or a good faith actor. It just makes him the enemy of "my" enemy.
Just for fun, I'd rank Obama as just edging out GWB as our least honest/transparent president on important matters. (too early to rank Biden, but he's up there)
GWB was being counseled by Colin Powell, so you can’t blame him for WMD issues.
I can and do blame him. If he's a puppet or misled, it's still on him as the president.
"Trump's lawyers say he sincerely believed (and still believes) that he was a victim of massive election fraud and, based on the legal advice he received, that the remedies he pursued were legitimate."
I'm curious. This really is the basis of these BS witch-hunting lawsuits. So if it does carry through to prosecution doesn't that make 40% of the voters GUILTY?
Board the Trains JEWS!!!!! /s
"By a margin of 52% to 40%, voters believe that “cheating affected the outcome of the 2020 U.S. presidential election.” That’s per a Rasmussen Reports survey from this month."
"It isn’t just Republicans who believe this cheating occurred. Even 34% of Democrats believe it, as do 38% of those who “somewhat” support President Biden."
Yes, polls often decide criminal matters.
assertions from TDS-addled lefty shits =/= evidence or argument.
You want your Marxist agenda to decide criminal matters instead.
It does when reasonable suspicion is the very foundation of the case. And as stated in my comment the leftard Nazi's would have to lock-up close to 1/2 the US population if they think Trump didn't have any grounds for reasonable suspicion.
No. This is a Nazi tactic. Silencing the skepticism. Punishing the allegation. It's not a pursuit of truth. It's a Gestapo police.
The problem with your poll is that it provides little context. Do the 34% of Democrats think that Democrats cheated? More likely they considered that Republicans cheated. Cheated with gerrymandering and voting restrictions. So get a poll with more context and we can consider what you have said.
Gerrymandering has nothing to do with presidential elections, and every time you commies accuse Republicans of making laws that "restrict" voting, the number of votes increases, especially in the minority populations, you claim are targets of the "restrictions".
So, maybe you are right that LieCheatSteal voters believe that bullshit about Republicans' "fraud", but there are still an awful lot of people, in the country that think these elections are a scam.
That's not good.
If the results went the other way, you'd be screaming for efforts to change them.
I am not disputing that many people may think elections are tainted with fraud. I am simple suggesting that as with much that divides us each side thinks the other cheats. Therefore a poll that shows people think there was election cheating does not really tells anything other than we are divided.
What it tells us is that the belief that fraud affected the outcome of the 2020 is the majority consensus so the prosecution's claim that Trump somehow knew otherwise is bullshit.
This cases against Donald Trump are not about belief they are rooted in facts. Only two of the four criminal cases involve the election. The most public civil cases are not related to the election. So only two of the many cases involve the election and these should be based on facts. The belief that one side or the other cheated is just that belief.
Like the fact that Trump wasn't even at the protest let alone encouraged any illegal activity? Or just BS you make up your head and label them 'facts' as if they carried some sort of prosecutive foundation what-so-ever? Oh I know... He didn't claim facebook ads stole the election... /s
I wonder if Sullum knows that being so filled with hate and TDS is not good for ones blood pressure.
We can hope it's fatal.
Don't worry, be happy!
Sullum is a deep state cuck. Derp Derp Derp. Trump Trump Trump. The walls are closing in according to sullum as the case completely implodes.
Good grief. "If you're innocent, you have nothing to fear."
From a so-called libertarian.
I'm not even a Trumper but sullum is unhinged from reality.
Cooperate or spend the rest of your life in court and paying attorneys a shitload of money. What a choice.
If you can't do the time...
See, the thing about Trump/MAGA is - for any rational person - it always had a quick expiration date. Kinda like jumping out of an airplane. I can see the appeal of the rush and exhilaration of it all, but at some point you'd better yank that ripcord or else you're going to go splat.
The movement was flawed from the start. They don't even know what "make America great again" means. Sure, they might spout some vague policy directions (which always seem to depend on an unhealthy amount of Statism) - but, ultimately it's just some fleeting feeling that they can't really describe. It's catchy, and it feels patriotic, and it stirs those rebellious streaks that are dyed into the very core of any red-blooded American. But it's devoid of any fundamental bedrock principles.
It's near identical to Leftism that way, actually. Blind, incoherent rage fueled by "us vs them" partisanship, an "ends justify the means" approach, and a "play by their rules" mentality. They make no effort to be better than those the claim to hate and are the enemy, but who are in fact they're virtually indistinguishable from.
J6ers learned this harsh lesson better than anyone. Ask them, or anyone who supports/defends them, what their endgame was. They don't have a clue. They can't articulate it even slightly - or, better, if they can, they don't dare do so. They followed the Leftist playbook of A) Get real mad; B) Act on said madness; C) ??????; D) Utopia!
Trump/MAGA was a flare of white hot irrational inflamed passions. But, like I said, once that wears off and it's time to be rational again - there's no place for it to go. And everyone smart is realizing that, if they haven't cut bait yet, they'd better do so soon.
Sadly, my prediction is that they'll be just like the Leftists and never quite appreciate when they cross into full blown fanatic lunacy.
When President Obama was elected the elected the Republican line was that the majority of the country was center right. Today's Republicans want to run the country from extreme right and deny their parties assessment of where the country really is at.
“The movement was flawed from the start. They don’t even know what
“make America great again”hope and change means. Sure, they might spout some vague policy directions (which always seem to depend on an unhealthy amount of Statism) – but, ultimately it’s just some fleeting feeling that they can’t really describe.”Ever hear of something called “politics”?
Fool.
Please feel free to continue proving my point, without realizing you're proving my point.
"Hope and Change", " Build Back Better", Make America Great Again ". If your point is that presidential campaigns come up with catchy slogans you sure wasted a lot of keystrokes.
That's not my point.
I can tell you what Make America Great Again means.
It means returning to a time, when the leaders of this most powerful, and wealthy nation, didn't act like they were ashamed of that position, and exhibited that guilt by laying down before the rest of the world, exemplified by 0bama's apology tour, soon after taking office.
It had started soon after Ronald Reagan, the last real America-loving president left office.
It also meant a country, where one's identity, or group, wasn't the defining factor in such things as what job you got, or what school you could enter, or whether your opinion was of more import than the majority. A time when college kids - and that's what they are, kids - that never grew up, stopped being the voices most listened to.
As for Jan6; what they wanted was to petition the government for a redress of a grievance, that the election was stolen.
Little did they know, that they were being set up for a Stasi-like effort to make political dissent into the types of "crimes" that banana republics use to crush their opponents, while ignoring the obvious depredations of their own.
See? And that's the complete disconnect which goes on in the MAGA brain that I'm talking about. You say you want all those things, but then you personify that desire in a man who was the single most ineffective president since his predecessor (but saved from history by being succeeded by an even more ineffective one) for all the same reasons! Including, but not limited to, the partisanship nonsense, the identity politics, and the weakening of America's social/cultural/moral framework to appease certain interests and enrage others.
That is - you picked a guy that was full of big talk, but who had absolutely zero walk to match it. (And, even more mind-bogglingly, when you DO have a guy whose walk matches his talk, you spurn him as a traitor and a weakling because he's perceived as a threat to the continued power of the other guy!)
You say you want all those things, but then you just go right down the exact same road of personality cult that the Left does. And, irrationally, defend it vehemently despite having absolutely nothing to show for it.
Like I said - MAGA was a fun ride, but never knew when you pull the ripcord to avoid going splat.
Gee, isn't that the same thing BLM says?
There's a right way and a wrong way to do that, friend. Violent rioting with no discernible plan of what to do once they got into the building is not "petition for redress." (It's not really "petition" at all.)
When the Founders wrote 1A, they didn't do it with unhinged torch and pitchfork mobs in mind. They did it to prevent that.
See? And that’s the complete disconnect which goes on in the MAGA brain that I’m talking about.
Nah. What you're seeing is the difficulty of explaining something to someone who is deliberately refusing to understand it.
but then you personify that desire in a man who was the single most ineffective president since his predecessor
See, nobody 'personified' that desire.
People wanted MAGA. That's what the tea party was. Same impulse. People wanted to scrape off the revolting layers of vileness that had been painted over this country by the left. The lies about the discovery, the founding, the history. The lies about the culture, the people. The lies about the aims, ideas, and aspirations.
All of that.
People wanted to have a country whose people could love it again, open and unabashed--without the nation's mouthpieces skulking around mealy-mouthing and disparaging everything that the US is.
And only one person understood that and articulated it.
That is – you picked a guy that was full of big talk, but who had absolutely zero walk to match it.
Remember them lies? Didn't walk the walk? Walked into North Korea. Alone. Got Muslims talking to Jews, signing actual accords. Recognized the real capitol of Israel and moved the embassy even when everyone else was condemning acting in accordance with reality.
Forced manufacturing to come back. Kicked the energy sector into high gear.
You keep your head wrapped in lies. Reality is reality.
when you DO have a guy whose walk matches his talk,
And you know how you know that? Because he got elected.
Know how he got elected? Because the OTHER guy's walk is big enough that people can just hop in and ride along.
Even your own argument reveals that you're listening to lies. Damn.
There’s a right way and a wrong way to do that, friend. Violent rioting with no discernible plan of what to do once they got into the building is not “petition for redress.”
There is indeed a right way and a wrong way. One of the founders thought that periodic violent revolution was the way to keep everything on track--to claw the scum that always attaches to politics out.
We don't do that. And look at what has happened. Scum like BLM rioting IN FAVOR of authoritarian control
lol
What do we have to show for it?
What do we have to show for it?
And it was nice while it lasted, but within 90 days of a change in power - poof, gone. Because he didn't know how to govern. Not that MAGA cared, because ruling by fiat is "winning!" in their book. Because it was never about "making America great again" (whatever that means) to them - it was just about "pwning the libs."
Which worked out so well for us in 2018, 2020, and 2022 didn't it. And, of course let's not forget this famous little Trumpism:
“Well, I think if they win, I should get all the credit,” Trump said. “If they lose, I should not be blamed at all."
Yea, you missed how he prefaced that with "an instance of a rebellion so honorably conducted."
Which cannot even by the widest of latitudes be considered a valid way to describe BLM/MAGA-J6 mayhem.
And you also missed the fact that it wasn't a call to arms to have regular rebellions. Most people - certainly not MAGAs or other Leftists - probably don't even realize that when he wrote it, he wasn't even talking about the People or the Citizenry. It was, in fact, a commentary about the State. Specifically, how the State should deal with the People's spirit of resistance. Which, in part, helped define the concept we'd later recognize as "civil disobedience."
Which, again, cannot even by the widest of latitudes be considered a valid way to describe BLM/MAGA-J6 mayhem.
See - one thing Jefferson despised more than anything else was ignorance. And I imagine it irks him all the way into the Great Beyond that such ignorant people misuse that particular bit of his thinking. Jefferson wanted rational, informed, honorable patriots who would stand up to their government to keep it from becoming authoritarian. If you think it meant he ALSO wanted ignorant, unhinged, maniac torch and pitchfork mobs to run havoc with no discernible plan or articulate purpose or consideration for what happens after they go berserk - then you don't understand what he said even slightly.
Read its history. Start with Shay's Rebellion. The Regulators, and... that certain group who made their way in the literal text of the Bill of Rights, who put them down. Get back to me once you've educated yourself a little, and I'll be more than happy to discuss it further.
Even though I despise Trump, have never voted for him, and never will. The tactics of the Anti-Trump mob is beyond the pale.
Many of the prosecutors literally campaigned on a platform to go after a specific citizen, not crimes, but a person. This should have been enough to vote against them.
Prosecutors threatening defendants with extreme punishment is unfortunately commonplace, but in the cases against Trump and his MAGA Movement have become insanely vile.
The Anti-Trump mob often claims that Trump to be an authoritarian, but looking from the sidelines the Anti-Trump mob is far more authoritarian than Trump ever was.
If nothing more than there was a check on Trump by the Corporate Media. With Biden there isn't a check by the Corporate Media, but rather a sycophantic partner providing cover.
While I personally believe that both Biden and Trump are unfit to be President, I feel less threatened by Trump than by Biden. Additionally I believe that the USA would be more secure with Trump than with Biden.
Still neither should elected as President and both were failed Presidents, although Biden is much more of a disaster and Trump is more mediocre. There is also the age problem where both are far too old.
Trump who is the lesser of two evils is despicable, so you can only image how far beyond despicable the Anti-Trump mob and their senile puppet is.
Mr. Iceman, I agree with you. Most people recognize that the Dems consider themselves the 'chosen ones' and their sycophants, i.e., the MSM and the 'intelligence' agencies, appear to agree. They have clearly disrespected, hounded, and now have weaponized the legal system against this man; sadly it appears they have infected even formerly discerning Reason writers. (I note that often Reason articles include non-biased info, but their titles first scream their prejudice: Wolfe: "Trump's Stooges Flip", Sullum: "Why Is Trump Worried..." (not if). We have lived through the torment, if not abuse, of General Flynn and others enough to know that they will do whatever they can to take Trump out of 2024, (if not 'down'). It appears that this case hinges legally on WHAT exactly Trump believed. As a former therapist I don't know how we can ascertain that in fact. I can believe that a man in his position with his fragile/defended ego being attacked for years could easily, (if not correctly), interpret the nonsense of Russia-gate and the FBI's conspiracy to mislead voters about the laptop as strong indicators of their willingness to tamper in the election. Combine that with his counsels' advice and actions which supported his claim and it's even harder to make this case stick - unless the prosecutors tempt witnesses to provide the evidence they need to convict. But they'd never do that; just ask General Flynn.
You make Trump sound like he should be institutionalized.
> Why Is Trump Worried About What Mark Meadows Might Say in the Election Interference Cases?
So as my Trump loving mother would say, "If you have nothing to hide why do you care if your former Chief of Staff testifies in court?"
Or "I love Big Brother".
It is worth noting that Trump had four COFs and none say good things about him. That is why he may be more worried than your mother would be.
We know for a fact that laws were broken in places like Pennsylvania when it comes to balloting. If voting is done illegally the loser has a legitimate claim of theft of the election.
The loser may claim the theft of an election, but they must also prove that it was stolen. That has never been shown to be the case. Most of Trump's staff and his family agreed he lost. He was not looking for the truth he was looking for the answer he wanted.
The loser may claim the theft of an election, but they must also prove that it was stolen.
In this case, the cheaters bragged openly, in public and in print about exactly how they had cheated, including numerous instances that merited RICO charges, election interference, and open election fraud.
And no one did a thing. It was almost a duplicate of the, 'yes, Hillary committed multiple serious felonies, but she meant well so no reasonable person would indict her' that had happened prior.
Most of Trump’s staff and his family agreed he lost.
NONE of Trump's staff or family agreed that he lost --everyone's just looking at the crazy armed person shrieking that Trump lost and nodding along to stay alive.
Did you hear Jenna Ellis Maoist confession?
THAT is what they're shooting for.
As I noted you must prove the election stole not just try to yell it as loud as you possible can. Large numbers of staff have said there is no evidence of significant fraud that would have changed the election results. No one forced them to say this, for many they had simple had enough of Trump, not unlike the people who voted him out in November 2020.
So I can either believe Sullum that there is no such thing as overcharging ever and that all plea deals are entirely on the merits as spun by our marxist media and entirely just and honest or I can see a sham political prosecution being tried in the country of public opinion by malicious actors like Sullum. Tough call.
Fortunately, there are only two options. Just flip a coin?
Sullum has the reasoning skills of a toddler.
An entirely too long an article, all based on a false premise. I have read numerous times on these very pages of prosecutors overcharging defendants with the explicit purpose of eliciting a plea agreement. Yet here, Jacob completely ignores this practice. All of these defendants abundantly know they have zero chance of receiving a fair trial in these jurisdictions. Trump has that same zero chance, but he has the ability to fight and wait it out (appeals). At least 3 of these defendants have legal licenses which will be in jeopardy of being revoked (disbarment). And as those 3 are lawyers, they may believe they can out lawyer dumbass Fani on the stand, so why not agree to testify. Most of their testimony can at best be considered "hearsay" or unofficial opinion. And as a juror (and Libertarian), I immediately disregard ANY testimony from a witness receiving a plea agreement for said testimony. It is bought and paid for testimony for the prosecution. Every person will lie for the right price, and freedom is a very high price.
What's your price?
MA art