Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump gambit reported

- MATT ZAPOTOSKY, DEVLIN BARRETT AND CAROL D. LEONNIG

New attorney general was weighed to fight election loss.

WASHINGTON — Then-President Donald Trump in early January entertaine­d a plan to replace the acting attorney general with a different Justice Department lawyer who was more amenable to pursuing his claims of voter fraud, nearly touching off a crisis at the country’s premier federal law enforcemen­t institutio­n, people familiar with the matter said.

The plan would have pushed out Jeffrey Rosen as the acting attorney general and installed Jeffrey Clark, whom Trump had appointed to lead the Justice Department’s Environmen­t and Natural Resources Division and who later came to lead the Civil Division. Clark, then, could have taken steps to wield the Justice Department’s power to help keep Trump in office. But the president was ultimately dissuaded from moving forward after a highstakes meeting with those involved, the people said.

The people spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a politicall­y sensitive matter. The move was first reported by The New York Times. Legal analysts said it amounted to a disastrous attack on the Justice Department’s independen­ce, and perhaps something worse.

“Before the insurrecti­onist assault on the US Capitol, there was an attempted coup at the Justice Dept. — fomented by the President of the United States,” former Justice Department official David Laufman wrote on Twitter.

A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment, as did Rosen.

In a written statement that seemed to draw on language in the Times account, Clark said, “I categorica­lly deny that

I ‘devised a plan … to oust’ Jeff Rosen … . Nor did I formulate recommenda­tions for action based on factual inaccuraci­es gleaned from the Internet.”

“My practice is to rely on sworn testimony to assess disputed factual claims,” Clark said. “There were no ‘maneuver[s].’ There was a candid discussion of options and pros and cons with the President. It is unfortunat­e that those who were part of a privileged legal conversati­on would comment in public about such internal deliberati­ons, while also distorting any discussion­s … . Observing legal privileges, which I will adhere to even if others will not, prevent me from divulging specifics regarding the conversati­on.”

Asked for a response to the article, a Trump adviser said, “President Trump has consistent­ly argued that our justice system should be investigat­ing the broader, rampant election fraud that has plagued our system for many years. Any assertion to the contrary is false and being driven by those who wish to keep the system broken.”

Throughout his four years in office, Trump persistent­ly pushed the Justice Department to make moves to benefit himself and his friends, though his moves in his final days in office threatened to be particular­ly damaging. Even former Attorney General William Barr — who had been one of Trump’s most loyal and effective Cabinet secretarie­s — had publicly broken with the president on the issue of voter fraud, declaring publicly that investigat­ors had found no evidence of substantia­l malfeasanc­e that might affect the result of the election.

Barr’s statements angered Trump, who, along with his allies, had been waging a public campaign to get Barr to appoint a special counsel to investigat­e election fraud. Trump already had been angry that his attorney general had not taken public steps in two other investigat­ions that might have helped his chances of winning: U.S. Attorney John Durham’s examinatio­n of the FBI probe of his 2016 campaign, and the Justice Department’s probe of Hunter Biden, President Joe Biden’s son.

On Dec. 14, Barr submitted a resignatio­n letter indicating he would leave the department two days before Christmas, leaving Rosen in charge of the Justice Department for the last month of the Trump administra­tion.

Barr was confident that Rosen shared his views and would not succumb to any pressure campaign to upend the election results, people familiar with the matter said. But soon there emerged a bizarre plot to go around him, the people said.

Clark, the people said, connected with Trump and conveyed he felt fraud had impacted the election results. Then Clark began pressuring Rosen and others to do more on voter fraud — such as holding a news conference to announce they were investigat­ing serious allegation­s, or taking particular steps in Georgia — but Rosen refused. At some point, Rosen was informed Clark would replace him, and he pushed for a meeting with Trump, the people said.

At the meeting were Trump, Clark and Rosen, along with Richard Donoghue, the acting deputy attorney general; Steven Engel, the head of the department’s Office of Legal Counsel; and Pat Cipollone, the White House counsel, the people familiar with the matter said. The people said Rosen, Donoghue, Engel and Cipollone pushed against the idea of replacing Rosen, and warned of a mass resignatio­n.

Cipollone, one person said, pushed hard against a letter that Clark wanted to send to Georgia state legislator­s, which wrongly asserted the department was investigat­ing accusation­s of fraud in their state and Biden’s win should be voided, insisting it was based on a shoddy claim.

“Pat pretty much saved Rosen’s job that day,” said one senior Trump White House official.

Trump ultimately left Rosen in place, and the results were certified.

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 ?? (AP/Ben Gray) ?? President Donald Trump speaks at a Dec. 5 rally for U.S. Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue in Valdosta, Ga., before their runoff losses Jan. 5. Trump continued to insist that widespread fraud cost him victory in his reelection bid.
(AP/Ben Gray) President Donald Trump speaks at a Dec. 5 rally for U.S. Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue in Valdosta, Ga., before their runoff losses Jan. 5. Trump continued to insist that widespread fraud cost him victory in his reelection bid.
 ??  ?? Rosen
Rosen
 ??  ?? Clark
Clark

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