Hartford Courant

Can Trump be tied to his allies’ roles?

- By Jonathan Bernstein

What explained the devastatin­g weight of Tuesday’s hearing of the House Jan. 6 committee? The testimony barely mentioned the attack on the U.S. Capitol or other events of that day in 2021.

Instead we heard, in new and terrifying detail, about Donald Trump’s efforts to pressure Republican officials in state after state to overturn the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. By expanding the scope of the events covered, the panel heard from witnesses who recounted just how massive and systematic the efforts by Trump and his allies really were — and how violence and threats of violence played a central role in it.

Arguments about whether the attack on the Capitol was an “insurrecti­on” or not are beside the point. What matters is the big picture.

We still do not have firm evidence tying Trump specifical­ly to organized violent outbreaks, including the Capitol attack.

But we’ve now seen enough that it’s clear Trump either knew his words would put people in danger or he should have known. And the same goes for those around him.

Those of us who have followed this story closely already knew the broad outlines and even many details in the stories of Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowers; Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger; Gabriel Sterling of the Georgia secretary of state’s office, and Georgia election worker Shaye Moss.

But Tuesday’s airing of their accounts, one after another, was just brutal.

Bowers endured Saturday protests outside his house, with armed Trump fans calling him (among other things) a pedophile.

Sterling described how he was moved to give his forceful public statement denouncing efforts to overturn the election after seeing a staffer in his office overwhelme­d by vicious, personal attacks on social media.

Moss and her mother were so intimidate­d by the president’s attacks and those of his followers that they basically shut down their lives.

In other words, the committee artfully made the case that the violence of Jan. 6 was only a continuati­on of violent efforts to bully everyone who stood in the way of the president and his desire to stay in office, regardless of the facts and the law.

We already knew that the fraud accusation­s

that Trump and his allies made were investigat­ed and found to be false or frivolous, based on obvious fictions or misunderst­andings of normal procedures. And still, Trump ramped up pressure on Republican officehold­ers in states Joe Biden had won.

We knew about the scheme, probably criminal and certainly outside of the law and the Constituti­on, to submit slates of false electors in states that Trump had lost. And about his call to Raffensper­ger, in which the then president begged, cajoled and threatened him to “find” the votes needed to reverse the Georgia outcome — this figured prominentl­y in Trump’s second impeachmen­t and Senate trial.

There was some new detail. For example, Rudy Giuliani told Bowers that “we’ve

got lots of theories — we just don’t have any evidence.” I don’t think that was previously reported, and it helped make the committee’s point that the conspirato­rs were well aware that Trump had lost the election.

And we knew that violence and threats of violence had been present throughout the post-election period and were a regular feature of Trump’s rallies from the start of his 2016 run for president.

In contrast to Trump and his allies, Tuesday’s witnesses stood out as patriots. Committee Chair Bennie Thompson in his opening remarks thanked the various elected officials, bureaucrat­s and election workers who have testified “for their service”: The U.S. is defended, after all, by its democratic institutio­ns — defined by the men and women who do their jobs

faithfully or not — even more than by its military might, and has been since 1776. It was inspiring to watching Bowers, Raffensper­ger, Sterling and Moss stand up for democracy, despite the costs that they have had to endure — especially when you consider how few Republican­s have been willing to rally to their side.

It’s not yet clear how strong the legal case against Trump will be. But I agree with the political scientist Alex Garlick, who said that “the more we learn from the January 6 committee, the more it becomes obvious that the Senate’s inability to convict Trump in February 2021 was a failure of historical proportion­s.”

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY ?? Arizona official Rusty Bowers, left, and Georgia officials Brad Raffensper­ger and Gabriel Sterling on Tuesday.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY Arizona official Rusty Bowers, left, and Georgia officials Brad Raffensper­ger and Gabriel Sterling on Tuesday.

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