Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump’s lawyers file new challenges in election case

- BY ERIC TUCKER AND ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

WASHINGTON — Lawyers for Donald Trump are raising new challenges to the federal election subversion case against him, telling a judge the indictment should be dismissed because it violates the former president’s free speech rights and represents a vindictive prosecutio­n.

The motions filed late Monday in the case charging the Republican with plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 election he lost are on top of a pending argument by defense attorneys that he is immune from federal prosecutio­n for actions taken within his official role as president.

Special counsel Jack Smith’s team urged a judge last week to reject that argument and is expected to do the same for the latest motions. It is routine for defendants to ask a judge to dismiss the charges against them, but such requests are rarely granted. In Trump’s case, though, the challenges to the indictment could at a minimum force a delay in a prosecutio­n that is set for trial in Washington next March.

Taken together, the motions cut to the heart of some of Trump’s most oftrepeate­d public defenses: that he is being prosecuted for political reasons by the Biden administra­tion Justice Department and that he was within his First Amendment rights to challenge the outcome of the election and to allege that it had been tainted by fraud — a finding not supported by courts across the country or even by Trump’s own attorney general.

The lawyers claim prosecutor­s are attempting to criminaliz­e political speech and political advocacy, arguing that First Amendment protection­s extend even to statements “made in advocating for government officials to act on one’s views.” They said the prosecutio­n team “cannot criminaliz­e claims that the 2020 Presidenti­al election was stolen” nor “impose its views on a disputed political question” like the election’s integrity.

“The fact that the indictment alleges that the speech at issue was supposedly, according to the prosecutio­n, ‘false’ makes no difference,” the defense wrote. “Under the First Amendment, each individual American participat­ing in a free marketplac­e of ideas — not the federal Government — decides for him or herself what is true and false on great disputed social and political questions.”

Legal experts have said Trump’s First Amendment claims are unlikely to succeed, particular­ly given the breadth of steps taken by Trump and his allies that prosecutor­s say transforme­d mere speech into action in a failed bid to undo the election.

Smith’s team conceded at the outset of the four-count indictment that Trump could indeed lawfully challenge his loss to Democrat Joe Biden but said his actions went far beyond that, including by illegally conspiring to block the official counting of electoral votes by Congress on Jan. 6, 2021, when rioters who supported him stormed the Capitol and caused a violent clash with police and a delay to the proceeding­s.

A spokesman for Smith declined to comment Tuesday.

The defense lawyers also contend that Trump, the early front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination, is being prosecuted for vindictive and political reasons, alleging that “Biden’s publicly stated objective is to use the criminal justice system to incapacita­te President Trump, his main political rival and the leading candidate in the upcoming election.”

They say the Justice Department appointed Smith as special counsel last year as a way to “insulate Biden and his supporters from scrutiny of their obvious and illegal bias.”

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