Baltimore Sun

Trump grievances feeding undertow

Rhetoric after the election spurring dangerous climate

- By Colleen Long and Calvin Woodward

WASHINGTON — The last throes of Donald Trump’s presidency have turned potentiall­y dangerous.

Death threats are on the rise. Local and state election officials are being hounded into hiding. A Trump campaign lawyer is declaring publicly that a federal official who defended the integrity of the election should be “drawn and quartered” or simply shot.

Neutral public servants, Democrats and a growing number of Republican­s who won’t do what Trump wants are being caught in a postelecti­on undertow stirred by Trump’s grievances about the election he lost.

“Death threats, physical threats, intimidati­on — it’s too much, it’s not right,” said Gabriel Sterling, a Republican elections official in Georgia who implored Trump this week to “stop inspiring people to commit potential acts of violence.” Trump in response only pressed his groundless case that he lost unfairly, neither discouragi­ng trouble nor explicitly calling for it.

The triggering of emotions has always been a Trump staple. His political movement was born in arenas that echoed with chants of “lock her up.”

But in the final weeks of Trump’s presidency — as state after state has affirmed Biden’s victory and judge after judge has dismissed Trump’s legal challenges — his cadre of loyalists has played to his frustratio­ns. As President-elect Joe Biden builds the foundation of his new administra­tion, Trump is commanding attention for the agitations he is appears

prepared to carry forward when he is gone from office.

“I do not think this goes away on January 20,” Eric Coomer, security director for Dominion Voting Systems, said from the secret location where is hiding out from death threats. “I think it will continue for a long time.”

Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani expressed little sympathy for state officials fearing for their safety.

“They’re the one who should have the courage to step up,” Giuliani said Wednesday in Michigan. “You have got to get them to remember that their oath to the Constituti­on sometimes requires being criticized. Sometimes it even requires being threatened.”

For Coomer, the trouble began around the time Trump campaign lawyers falsely claimed his company rigged the election.

Far-right chat rooms posted his photo, details about his family and address. “The first death threats fol

lowed almost immediatel­y,” he said. “For the first couple days it was your standard online Twitter threats, ‘hang him, he’s a traitor.’ ”

But then came targeted phone calls, text messages and a handwritte­n letter to his father, an Army veteran, from a presumed militia group saying: “How does it feel to have a traitor for a son?” Even now, weeks later and relocated to a secret locale, Coomer is getting messages from people saying they know what town he has fled to and vowing to find him.

“It’s terrifying,” he said. “I’ve worked in internatio­nal elections in all sorts of post- conflict countries where election violence is real and people end up getting killed over it. And I feel that we’re on the verge of that.”

This week Joe diGenova, a Trump campaign lawyer, told a radio show that a federal election official who was fired for disputing Trump’s claims of fraud

“should be drawn and quartered. Taken out at dawnand shot.” This, as election officials and voting-system contractor­s in Georgia, Arizona, Michigan and elsewhere have been subjected to sinister threats for doing their jobs.

“Threats like these trigger an avalanche of them,” said Louis Clark, executive director and CEO of the Government Accountabi­lity Project, an organizati­on to protect whistleblo­wers. Of diGenova, Clark said: “It’s behavior befitting a mob attorney.”

DiGenova later said he was joking. The fired official, Christophe­r Krebs, told The Washington Post: “My lawyers will do the talking, they’ll do it in court.”

As “Anonymous,” former Homeland Security official Miles Taylor wrote a searing insider account of the Trump administra­tion, prompting Trump to tell rallies that “very bad things” would happen to this “traitor.” Now Taylor’s identity is known and he’s been

assigned a security detail as the Secret Service recommende­d because of the nature of the threats against him.

“This is unpreceden­ted in America,” Taylor said. “This is not who we are. This is not what an open society is supposed to look like.”

Taylor said intimidati­on has proved an effective tool to quash dissent. “I spoke to very senior former officials who wanted to come out to tell the truth during the presidenti­al campaign, and many were afraid that it would put their families in harm’s way.”

But such pressure has not silenced some Republican­s in Georgia, with telling results.

Intruders have been found on the property of GOP Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, who has defended the integrity of his state’s election, which resulted in a narrow Biden victory. And a young Dominion systems contractor has been harassed with death threats and a video showing him working with election data. Dominion is the sole voting system provider in Georgia, so the company has been a lightning rod.

“There’s a noose out there with his name on it,” Sterling said of the contractor, in a broadside against the rhetoric and threats in the election’s aftermath.

Said Sterling, the Republican Georgia election official: “Someone’s going to get hurt. Someone’s going to get shot. Someone’s going to get killed. And it’s not right.”

Trump last week called Raffensper­ger an “enemy of the people,” Sterling noted, adding, “That helped open the floodgates to this kind of crap.” In addition to seeing people drive by and come on to his property, Raffensper­ger’s wife has been getting obscene threats on her cellphone, Sterling said.

In Arizona, Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs said she’s faced threats of violence directed at her family and her office.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said the White House condemns any violence. “What I will say though, too, is that the president’s lawyers (had) their private informatio­n put out,” she said, blaming “leftist organizati­ons.”

“So we’re seeing that happen to people on both sides of the argument and there’s no place for that ever anywhere,” she said. Indeed, GOP poll watchers said in affidavits in election litigation that they felt threatened and were jeered by Democrats.

A key difference, though, is that intimidati­on against Republican poll workers or officials by Trump’s opponents did not come from the top. Biden has largely stayed out of the fray even as Trump systematic­ally maligns the process, the election workers, the state officials who resist his pressure and some of the judges.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP ?? President Trump’s grievances about the election are stirring comments from supporters that include death threats.
SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP President Trump’s grievances about the election are stirring comments from supporters that include death threats.

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