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Author Topic: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2  (Read 453529 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6288 on: June 22, 2023, 10:01:58 AM »
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Dem congressman brutally reviews John Durham's record: 'You lost all the cases you brought to trial'

Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) delivered a brutal review of former special counsel John Durham's record over the four years that he worked on investigating the origins of the FBI's probe into the 2016 Trump campaign's contacts with Russian agents.

In questioning Durham, Nadler highlighted not just the length of time that Durham had to complete his probe but also the lack of success he had in pursuing criminal charges.

"Did it take four years to complete?" Nadler asked Durham about his investigation.

"Correct," replied Durham.

"OK," said Nadler. "And with all these resources and all these people that were sent to help you investigate the investigators, you only filed three criminal cases. You only brought two cases to trial, correct?"

"Correct," replied Durham.

"And you lost all the cases that you brought to trial, correct?" Nadler asked.

"Correct," Durham acknowledged.

"In fact, two juries acquitted your defendants on all charges," Nadler continued. "And the one conviction you obtained, the defendant pleaded guilty to a single count that never went to trial. Correct?"

"Correct," said Durham.

Nadler went on to note that the primary investigatory steps taken in Durham's sole conviction were completed by Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz.

Watch: https://twitter.com/i/status/1671514389504053250



John Durham's 'embarrassing' testimony shows why his probe was 'bungled from the start': legal experts



Former special counsel John Durham testified before the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday and saw his findings get picked apart by multiple Democratic lawmakers, including Reps. Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Jerry Nadler (D-NY).

Schiff in particular pelted Durham repeatedly about former President Donald Trump's actions throughout the 2016 campaign, where he openly encouraged the Russian government to hack his opponent's emails and where his son took a meeting with a Russian agent promising dirt on said opponent.

Durham at times appeared to be unfamiliar with some of the facts mentioned by Schiff, including the fact that Trump repeatedly encouraged people to read the hacked Clinton campaign emails that were stolen by Russian intelligence services and spread via WikiLeaks.

This exchange in particular drew the attention of some legal experts who said it showed that Durham was way out of his depth.

"This is embarrassing," commented former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance on Twitter after seeing that Durham said, "I really don't read the newspapers" in response to one of Schiff's questions.

National security attorney Bradley Moss, meanwhile, expressed astonishment at Durham's ignorance about Trump's behavior.

"This was the grand savior of Trump's vengeance quest?" he asked. "No offense to Durham, but you don't have to read newspapers to know this stuff. It was in the Mueller Report. It was in the GOP Senate Report. This is why this probe was bungled from the start."

And New York University Law professor Ryan Goodman highlighted how Durham seemed unfamiliar with the Mueller report's findings about how former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort met with a Kremlin-connected agent and gave him internal campaign polling data.

"Schiff is very effective at this," Goodman remarked. "It goes to the very heart of Durham’s fundamental flaws. And Durham is being completely exposed here."

https://twitter.com/JoyceWhiteVance/status/1671566122594754560



Nicolle Wallace busts John Durham for playing dumb about the Mueller report he was investigating

MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace highlighted testimony from former special counsel John Durham in Congress Wednesday and accused him of playing politics to dodge answering questions that were unflattering to him and his probe.

Speaking to NBC News reporter Garrett Haake, Wallace pointed out that Durham did not know the answer to basic facts about things he was supposed to be investigating.

"Durham's mandate is to investigate not just any investigators, not just investigators who happen to investigate while [Donald] Trump was president, not investigators who may have had one of the pieces of paper that cross their desk that pertains Russia, Durham's mandate was to investigate the investigators who investigated interference by Russia in the 2016 election," Wallace said. "And what a lot of people talk about when they revisit the Mueller report is the Trump figures that were charged that like Paul Manafort, Rick Gates and George Papadopoulos. Mueller also indicted a whole lot of Russians. Durham was the man in charge of the investigation, and he doesn't know basic facts? He either misstates or erroneously recounts the conclusions of the Mueller report. What was that?"

Haake said that his sense is that Durham didn't want to go down that road, so he simply refused to answer questions about it, saying that it wasn't part of his report.

Haake said that his sense is that Durham didn't want to go down that road, so he simply refused to answer questions about it, saying that it wasn't part of his report.

"You might have an issue with the bias Peter Strzok indicated in his text messages, but weren't these findings still findings?" Haake asked. "Were not Russians, in fact, trying to get involved in the Trump campaign or be involved in the 2016 election in a significant way? And nothing in the Durham report undercuts any of those findings by Mueller or the Crossfire Hurricane team that predated him under Jim Comey. I think that's why you would two wholly separate conversations, only tangentially dealing with that paper report in front of them going on in that hearing room for five hours today."

Wallace noted that the one somewhat legitimate finding from the Durham report is that there should have been a preliminary investigation into Russian involvement in the 2016 election before the larger investigation.

"At the end of the day, for both Charlie [Savage's] reporting and Garret's, he does not come out and refute the facts that predicated the opening of an investigation. It's simply this rather technical dispute about whether it should have been a preliminary instead of the full. But the wreckage, the blast radius, four years of Donald Trump and Sean Hannity, and everyone on the right building up the Durham report is coming!"

She recalled being in Washington with Trump-era DOJ officials ahead of the Mueller report dropping, and she said that all of them insisted that Durham would discount everything.

"They said, 'This is nothing, wait until you see what Durham's got.' And I said, 'Oh, yeah, what does Durham have?' Durham never had anything except a tip to open an investigation into Donald Trump," Wallace said. "And that was something he couldn't even answer for today."

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6288 on: June 22, 2023, 10:01:58 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6289 on: June 22, 2023, 10:34:57 AM »
U.S. judge sets Aug. 14 trial date for Trump in Florida documents case
https://www.reuters.com/legal/us-judge-sets-aug-14-trial-date-trump-florida-documents-case-2023-06-20/


Trump's legal team now has access to discovery evidence including witness list: report



The Department of Justice on Wednesday handed over discovery evidence to Donald Trump’s legal team in the classified documents case, Politico’s Kyley Cheney reports.

The discovery evidence includes the list of witnesses who will testify for the government in the case against the former president.

“DOJ says it has made its first production of trial discovery to Donald Trump and his team — which means (per the below) he now knows who’s going to testify against him, and roughly what they’re going to say,” Cheney tweeted.

According to court records obtained by Cheney, the evidence includes “the grand jury testimony of witnesses who will testify for the government at the trail of this case.”

But Trump can’t share the material publicly.

On Monday a federal judge approved a protective order special counsel Jack Smith sought to prevent the former president from sharing potentially sensitive information, ABC News reports.

Trump last week was charged with 37 counts in connection with his handling of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate.

The protective order includes Trump co-defendant Walt Nauta.

The order states that Trump and Nauta "shall not disclose the Discovery Materials or their contents directly or indirectly to any person or entity other than persons employed to assist in the defense, persons who are interviewed as potential witnesses, counsel for potential witnesses, and other persons to whom the Court may authorize disclosure."

Read More Here: https://abcnews.go.com/US/judge-orders-trump-disclose-evidence-classified-documents-case/story?id=100193266



News Wrap: Judge sets trial date for Trump documents case

In our news wrap Tuesday, a federal judge in Florida set August 14 for former President Trump's classified documents case to go to trial

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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6290 on: June 22, 2023, 11:10:50 AM »
Trump had part 2 of his disastrous Faux News interview the other night. Bret Baier made Donnie look like the total moron he is. This is how the media should have handled Donald Trump from the beginning instead of the softball questions he routinely has gotten over the years. Check out the clip below. It's absolutely brutal for Donnie.

MeidasTouch @MeidasTouch

Trump brags to Bret Baier about granting Alice Johnson clemency.

Baier informs him that she would be killed under his policy proposal of executing drug dealers.

Trump is caught off guard: "No, no. No. Under my pl–. Under that? UHHHHHHHHHHH..."


Watch: https://twitter.com/i/status/1671291632824778752

https://twitter.com/MeidasTouch/status/1671291632824778752

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6290 on: June 22, 2023, 11:10:50 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6291 on: June 22, 2023, 10:40:07 PM »
'A terrifying day': Former FBI agent says evidence turned over to Trump is 'overwhelming'



All of the evidence the Justice Department collected about the classified documents case was turned over to Donald Trump and his lawyers on Thursday – and an FBI expert says the trove is likely to be terrifying.

While the specifics aren't public, what is available is a list of the types of information. Documents obtained via subpoena, evidence obtained via search warrants, transcripts of grand jury testimony taken before a grand jury in the District of Columbia, transcripts of grand jury testimony taken in the Southern District of Florida, witness interviews conducted through May 12, 2023, key documents, and photographs, and complete copies of closed-circuit television footage.

Speaking about it in Nicolle Wallace's MSNBC panel, former FBI agent Peter Strzok explained that these details aren't going to surprise anyone in law enforcement or government, but for someone who hasn't faced off against the Department of Justice, it's likely a shock.

"Keep in mind we don't have the slightest idea of the totality of information that Jack Smith and his team have assembled. Every court document, whether it's an affidavit for a search warrant, information on an indictment, does not contain and is not required to contain the totality of information that the government has in its possession," Strzok explained. "So, it stands to reason, not only has there been a grand jury but separate and apart from that grand jury, this investigation has been going on for some time."

It means that subpoenas, voluntary interviews, search warrants, and everything else collected was sent to Trump.

"And if I'm on Trump's defense team, today and yesterday is a terrifying day because the volume of information they suddenly have in their lap, all these different people giving accounts of what happened through the course of the mishandling of the classified information is suddenly available to them," Strzok continued. "And it is, I'm sure, an overwhelming amount of information. I'm sure we are going to see more of it certainly if we go to trial."

He also pointed out that the information revealed is only the unclassified information. There is still a slew of classified information that hasn't gone through the "secret process" to decide what will be turned over and when. There's more to come, he said.

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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6292 on: June 22, 2023, 10:48:23 PM »
Trump says he was too 'busy' to quickly return classified docs, wanted to get 'personal things'
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/trump-busy-quickly-return-classified-docs-wanted-personal/story?id=100256459


New ad mocks Trump’s excuse that he was too ‘busy’ to hand back boxes of secret government intel
Trump is facing 37 felony charges over his handling of classified documents
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/donald-trump-ad-classified-documents-b2362512.html


'Afraid': Analyst says Trump showed uncharacteristic emotion during interview

Donald Trump looked to be uncharacteristically fearful in an interview earlier this week that may have exacerbated his legal troubles, a prominent columnist writes.

Tom Nichols writes for The Atlantic that it wasn’t Trump’s “jittery and combative” tone during a two-part interview on Fox News with host Bret Baier that caught his attention .“That’s not unusual,” he wrote.

What caught his attention was the extent to which the former president seemed uneasy on his home turf, giving the impression something wasn’t right with the former president.

"Donald Trump seems, more than anything, to be afraid," Nichols wrote.

Nichols notes that despite Trump’s complaints about the right-wing cable network, “Fox, after all, is the network that proved its commitment to Trump by shelling out $787.5 millionas the price of supporting his fantasies about voting machines. And yet, by the end of the interview, Trump was calling Fox a ‘hostile’ network.”

But it was the former president’s answer to one question in particular, which Nichols believes is likely to give Trump and his legal team heartburn.

Nichols writes that “In a potentially important moment, Baier pressed Trump about why he hadn’t simply returned the boxes of materials as the government demanded.”

“Trump, after his ritual invocation of the Divine Right of Presidential Box Ownership, said that he’d wanted to return them but hadn’t had enough time to go through everything, so he didn’t know what was in them. Bad move: Trump had already gotten his lawyers to certify that he did, in fact, know what was in them — or, more accurately, to certify that nothing classified or sensitive remained. As some legal analysts quickly pointed out, including a former prosecutor named Chris Christie, this all sounds a lot like obstruction of justice.”

Read More Here: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/06/donald-trump-fox-bret-baier-interview-fear/674467/

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6292 on: June 22, 2023, 10:48:23 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6293 on: June 23, 2023, 12:45:41 AM »
New recordings of Trump revealed in classified papers investigation, documents show

Under the terms of a protective order issued last week by Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart, Mr Trump is barred from viewing the evidence against him outside the presence of his attorneys



Federal prosecutors have given former president Donald Trump’s legal team access to much of the unclassified evidence against him, including multiple recordings of Mr Trump made during interviews of him since the end of his presidency.

Attorneys working under the supervision of Department of Justice Special Counsel Jack Smith revealed the existence of the recordings in a late Wednesday court filing which detailed what has been turned over to Mr Trump’s lawyers thus far as part of the legally-mandated “discovery” process, in which the government reveals what evidence it intends to use against a criminal defendant at trial.

Specifically, the document says the government has turned over copies of “any written or recorded statements” made by Mr Trump or his co-defendant, Walt Nauta.

Prosecutors said that category of evidence includes multiple “interviews” of Mr Trump by “non-governmental entities,” such as the 21 July 2021 interview referenced in the indictment of the ex-president.

During that interview, Mr Trump spoke to two people who were assisting his ex-chief of staff, Mark Meadows, with the writing of a book about his former administration, and discussed a document which the ex-president claimed to be a war plan for attacking a foreign country. At the time, Mr Trump described the document as “secret information” and noted that he was not able to declassify it because he was no longer president.

The batch of documents provided to Mr Trump’s defence team also includes transcripts of testimony given by witnesses to grand juries in Washington, DC and Florida during the government’s investigation into his alleged mishandling of national defence information, as well as other materials obtained by the government by way of subpoenas and search warrants, such as surveillance footage from his Mar-a-Lago property.

Prosecutors wrote that the tranche of evidence made available to the ex-president’s attorneys “includes the grand jury testimony of witnesses who will testify for the government at the trial of this case”.

Under the terms of a protective order issued last week by Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart, Mr Trump is barred from viewing the evidence against him outside the presence of his attorneys.

The order states that Mr Trump “shall only have access to Discovery Materials under the direct supervision of Defense Counsel or a member of Defense Counsel’s staff,” and prohibited either of them from retaining copies of the materials themselves or taking any notes with them after viewing any of the materials.

The protective order and the restrictions it places upon Mr Trump are meant in part to prevent him from directing his followers to harass any witnesses against him or any FBI or DOJ personnel involved in the case.

Magistrate Judge Reinhart also ordered that the discovery materials be kept only by Mr Trump’s legal team and stored securely on premises controlled by them.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-news-recordings-fbi-documents-b2362382.html



Former federal prosecutor predicts Trump will be tempted to tamper with evidence and witnesses now



The Justice Department turned over all of the evidence that it has collected against former President Donald Trump regarding his refusal to turn over government documents he took upon leaving the White House. Today is the day that former U.S. Attorney Glenn Kirschner predicts Trump will want to start tampering with evidence.

Speaking on MSNBC's "Deadline White House" on Thursday, the panel cracked jokes about the all-caps rants that have surfaced on Trump's social media site.

Kirschner told Nicolle Wallace that there are some risks to giving the information to Trump, and it's one of the reasons that there was a protective order put in place. That doesn't mean that Trump won't try to fumble his way through witness tampering.

"You know, it's a small consolation if Donald Trump were to tamper with a witness to the detriment of the case and of the witness, yeah, it might be great; the judge might be able to hold him accountable, hold him in contempt, fine him, and possibly even incarcerate him, but the damage has been done," said Kirschner. "At this point you can only confine a man for but one life, and look at all the charges that are pending against Donald Trump. But, you know, if Donald Trump was ever inspired to tamper with witnesses, Nicolle, I have a feeling that will be at its zenith when he reads those grand jury transcripts."

He noted that there are people who are inclined to say one thing when they're in front of Trump and something else when they're in front of a grand jury and under oath.

"And these, we believe, are Donald Trump's own attorneys; they are close associates, heck, they may be cabinet members and family members," said Kirschner. "So, I think this will be a real eye-opening moment for Donald Trump when he starts poring through these grand jury transcripts and he sees what all of these people have testified about regarding his misconduct."

Wallace said that the only real comparison that Americans have to something like this with Trump is when former White House counsel Don McGahn spoke to special counsel Robert Mueller. He was fired after Trump realized just how long McGahn spent with Mueller's team. This might be a different matter.

New York Times reporter Katie Benner said that she'll be looking into who some of the witnesses were that aren't already known. She also said that McGahn was someone she thought of as well when she saw just how many witnesses the special counsel spoke to.

"There's going to be things Donald Trump and his team sees that are evidence that the special counsel has gathered that has really nothing to do with whether or not people have betrayed him on purpose but simply because of the team around him, the people around him, and Donald Trump himself, were really not careful when they spoke about these documents, when they moved these documents around, when they took pictures of them and texted them to one another," Benner said.

She explained that she thinks it will ultimately be the part that truly hurts Trump the most.

"There was so much documentation and so much talk about these documents among so many people," she concluded. "It was just not a well-kept secret he had them. It's incredible this special counsel's office was able to seek out all this information."

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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6294 on: June 23, 2023, 12:53:12 AM »
Trump talks about classified documents on audio recordings: Sources | ABCNL

ABC News’ Pierre Thomas details reported audio recordings of Donald Trump discussing classified documents and what they could mean for investigators.

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Everyone is ready for Trump's criminal trial — except Trump: legal expert

Everyone is preparing to move forward with former President Donald Trump's trial for Espionage Act charges — except the former president himself, said former federal prosecutor Elie Honig on CNN Thursday.

Honig's analysis came amid a discussion of how prosecutors have revealed new recordings of Trump as part of the evidence submitted ahead of the trial.

"Does this signal anything to you about a timeline for the trial?" asked anchor Jake Tapper.

"Well, Jake, it tells me that everyone's pushing, except for Donald Trump, for a quick trial," said Honig. "Prosecutors have begun to turn over vast amounts of discovery. They've said they're ready within 70 days. The judge has set a tentative trial date, which is unlikely to hold, for August."

The main "X factor," Honig continued, is Trump himself.

"He's the defendant," said Honig. "He's the one who has the right to file motions to — to prep. So two of the three necessary parties are on board. We'll see if Donald Trump goes along with that. We suspect he's going to want to slow things down."

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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6295 on: June 23, 2023, 10:53:09 AM »
Trump’s ‘prison nightmare’ comes to life: Convicts in similar cases go to prison
https://www.msnbc.com/the-beat-with-ari/watch/trump-s-prison-nightmare-comes-to-life-convicts-in-similar-cases-go-to-prison-184190533925

Trump’s TV confessions pave path to prison: Jack Smith sends Trump his own interviews in new filing
https://www.msnbc.com/the-beat-with-ari/watch/trump-s-tv-confessions-pave-path-to-prison-jack-smith-sends-trump-his-own-interviews-in-new-filing-184190021804


Trump’s Fox News interview was a defense attorney’s nightmare

The former president offered a confusing, and likely damaging, defense of his latest indictment.



In a tense Fox News interview on Monday, former President Donald Trump offered a confusing defense in response to his recent indictment, touting his right to keep sensitive documents and effectively admitting that he held onto them even after he was supposed to return them. Trump’s interview follows a 37-count indictment that’s centered on his decision to take classified national security documents after leaving the White House, for which he was arraigned in court in Miami last week.

“I have every right to have those boxes,” Trump told Fox News host Bret Baier as part of their conversation, while claiming that these documents were “declassified,” a point the indictment rebuts. “This is purely a Presidential Records Act. This is not a criminal thing.”

Trump’s statements, many of which were meandering and difficult to follow, both provided a muddled defense, and may have offered fodder to reinforce some of the charges against him. By acknowledging that he had the documents in his possession and that he had reasons for not returning them promptly, Trump’s statements corroborated allegations he’s charged with regarding mishandling these materials.


1) Trump explained why he didn’t hand documents over to National Archives

Watch: https://twitter.com/i/status/1670917466036269057

At one point, Baier asks Trump directly why he didn’t give sensitive documents back to the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and Trump notes that it’s because he wanted to remove personal belongings and because he was “busy.”

“Why not just hand them over then?” Baier asked.

“Because I had boxes. I want to go through the boxes and get all my personal things out,” Trump said. “I don’t want to hand that over to NARA yet. And I was very busy, as you’ve sort of seen.”

“But according to the indictment, you then tell this aide to move to other locations after telling your lawyers to say you’ve fully complied with the subpoena when you hadn’t,” Baier asked.

“But before I send boxes over, I have to take all of my things out,” Trump argued. “These boxes were interspersed with all sorts of things, golf shirts, clothing, pants, shoes, there were many things.”

These statements are significant because, as some legal experts have noted, they indicate that Trump knew he was holding on to information he was asked to return. That admission, ultimately, could be used to show that Trump was aware of what he was doing and involved in the retention of the documents.

“Trump confessed to personally going through the boxes and had no explanation for why classified records from those boxes wound up in his personal desk,” national security attorney Bradley Moss told Newsweek. “He placed himself at the scene of the retention and obstruction. This is the stuff of nightmares for a defense attorney.”


2) Trump claims he did not refer to confidential Iran document in recording

Watch: https://twitter.com/i/status/1670919463837769729

In the recording described in the indictment, Trump allegedly mentioned having sensitive information about attack plans on Iran in a meeting with a book publisher. According to the transcript, Trump describes a document that’s “secret” and “highly confidential.”

But in the Monday interview, Trump denied referring to or having a classified document, seemingly directly contradicting his own words in the recording. He emphasized that the materials he referenced in the recording included other content, like news clippings.

“There was no document,” Trump claimed. “That was a massive amount of papers and everything else talking about Iran and other things. And it may have been held up or may not, but that was not a document. I didn’t have a document per se. There was nothing to declassify. These were newspaper stories, magazine stories, and articles.”


3) Trump addresses critics from his own administration

Baier put Trump on the spot about attacks he’s faced from his own Cabinet members and questions about how he’d even staff the White House if he’s elected.

“Your Vice President Mike Pence is running against you, your Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, she’s running against you, your former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he’s not supporting you, you mention National Security Advisor John Bolton, he’s not supporting you either. You mentioned Attorney General Bill Barr, says you shouldn’t be president again, calls you the consummate narcissist and troubled man,” said Baier, going on to list other officials Trump has criticized. “So why did you hire all of them in the first place?”

“I hired 10 to one that were fantastic. We had a great economy, we had phenomenal people in charge of the economy, we had phenomenal people in the military. … I’m not a fan of certain of the television people,” Trump noted. “For every one you say, I had 10 that love us.”

Baier’s question points to the awkward situation Trump now finds himself in, with multiple former administration officials and allies now challenging him in the 2024 Republican primary. It’s an unusual scenario in which several former members of his own team, like Pence, have become some of his most vocal critics.


4) Trump doubles down on 2020 election lies

In response to a question about how he could win over independent women voters who may be turned off by his legal baggage, Trump leaned into his election lies further by once again suggesting that he won in 2020, a claim that’s been repeatedly disproven.

“First of all, I won in 2020 by a lot,” Trump said, suggesting that there was “cheating” on the other side.

“You lost the 2020 election,” Baier responded.

“You take a look at all of the stuffed ballots, take a look at all of the things, including things like the 51 intelligence agents,” Trump said.

“There were recounts in all of the swing states, there was not significant widespread fraud,” Baier noted. “There were investigations of widespread corruption, there was not a sense of that. There were lawsuits, more than 50 of them by your lawyers, some in front of judges that you appointed, that came out with no evidence.”

This exchange highlighted how Trump has continued to refuse to move on from the 2020 election fraud claims even as many Republicans have been eager for a fresh start after election denialism proved to be a losing message in many midterm races.


Trump’s interview comments may actually hurt his case

Legal experts have concluded that Trump’s comments could prove damaging for him when the case goes to trial, something that could happen as soon as later this year. Not only did his statements fail to offer a coherent defense of his actions, but parts of the interview have the potential to strengthen the prosecution’s case since they speak to concerns that he actively took documents and prevented authorities from recovering them.

“He essentially admitted to obstruction of justice and said the reason he did it was that he needed to go through them,” Barbara McQuade, a former US attorney, said on MSNBC’s Morning Joe. “This evidence, this recording is very likely to be played before a jury trial.” Trump’s 2024 rival Chris Christie echoed this point in a CBS News interview on Tuesday, suggesting that Trump admitted to “obstruction of justice” in his conversation with Baier when he said he took more time to review the documents.

The statements from Trump’s interview could ultimately be used in court to bolster prosecutor’s claims that Trump both kept classified documents and failed to comply with a federal subpoena for them. “Statements of this kind are generally admissible at trial,” George Washington University law attorney Jonathan Turley posted on Twitter.

https://www.vox.com/politics/2023/6/20/23767291/trump-bret-baier-fox-news-indictment-documents

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6295 on: June 23, 2023, 10:53:09 AM »