Trump’s aides sought pardon after backing his defiance

Published June 25, 2022
A TWEET from former president Donald Trump on display during a hearing on the attack on US Capitol last year.—AFP
A TWEET from former president Donald Trump on display during a hearing on the attack on US Capitol last year.—AFP

WASHINGTON: At least five congressional Repu­blican allies of Donald Trump sought White House pardons after supporting his attempts to overturn his 2020 election defeat, witnesses told the US House of Representatives on Thursday during hearings related to the probe into the Jan 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol.

Their names emerged at the end of a fifth day of hearings that focused on how the former president pressured top Justice Department officials daily in his final weeks in office to help him illegally hold onto power.

Trump sought to replace acting attorney general Jeffrey Rosen with Jeffrey Clark, a Justice Department environmental lawyer and staunch supporter of his false claims that his defeat was the result of widespread fraud.

That move was headed off only when most of the rest of Justice Department leadership threatened to resign en masse if Trump carried it out.

“The president didn’t care about actually investigating the facts. He just wanted the Department of Justice to put its stamp of approval on the lies,” Representative Adam Kinzinger, a Republican committee member, said at Thursday’s hearing.

The committee heard from Rosen, his then-acting deputy attorney general Richard Donoghue and former assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Counsel Steven Engel, who testified in person, and screened video testimony from other Trump White House aides.

That video testimony showed that Republican Representatives Andy Biggs, Mo Brooks, Matt Gaetz, Louie Gohmert and Scott Perry sought pardons from Trump, which could have inoculated them against prosecution for any activities they may have engaged in before or during the Jan 6 riot at the Capitol.

Republican Repres­entative Jim Jordan, an outspoken defender of Trump, inquired at the White House about pardons but never asked for one for himself, said Cassidy Hutchinson, an aide to then-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.

Published in Dawn, June 25th, 2022

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