San Diego Union-Tribune

LAW PROFESSOR WHO SPOKE AT D.C. RALLY RETIRES

Chapman professor came under fire for election remarks

- BY ANDREA SALCEDO Salcedo writes for The Washington Post.

Hours before a pro-Trump mob attacked the Capitol on Nov. 6, John Eastman, a conservati­ve attorney and professor who challenged election results on President Donald Trump’s behalf, took the stage to rally the president’s supporters outside the White House.

“We know there was fraud,” the Chapman University professor said to loud cheers, echoing the president’s baseless claims of mass wrongdoing in the election. “We know that dead people voted.”

His remarks at the rally sparked outrage from his colleagues at the Orange County school, with scores of faculty demanding the university remove him from his role and the school president denouncing his speech.

On Wednesday, Chapman announced that Eastman would retire immediatel­y. In exchange, the school and professor agreed not to sue each other, although Eastman had accused the institutio­n of defamation over the blowback.

“Dr. Eastman’s departure closes this challengin­g chapter for Chapman and provides the most immediate and certain path forward for both the Chapman community and Dr. Eastman,” President Daniele Struppa said in a statement.

In a statement, Eastman confirmed his retirement “with mixed feeling,” while continuing to echo Trump’s fraud claims and defending his appearance at the rally.

“I participat­ed in a peaceful rally of nearly [half a] million people, two miles away from the violence that occurred at the capital and which began even before the speeches were finished,” Eastman said.

Eastman declined to comment further when reached by The Washington Post.

Eastman, who had taught at Chapman since 1999 and previously served as dean of the law school, drew national attention in August with an op-ed in Newsweek that falsely cast doubt on Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ citizenshi­p and eligibilit­y for the White House. President Trump and his allies seized on the argument, which Newsweek later apologized for.

More recently, Eastman represente­d the president in a failed lawsuit requesting the Supreme Court block four states from certifying Biden’s victory. A day before the Capitol riots, the New York Times reported, Eastman met with Trump and Vice President Mike Pence in the Oval Office, where he argued that Pence had the power to block Congress from certifying Biden’s victory.

At the Nov. 6 rally outside the White House, Eastman was joined onstage by Trump’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, who called for “trial by combat.” Eastman then repeated unfounded claims about voting machines causing election fraud.

The University of Colorado Boulder, where Eastman is a visiting professor, called his claims “baseless and unfounded” and noted that he wasn’t representi­ng the school at the rally. The university chancellor described Eastman’s allegation­s as “repugnant” but added that he would not fire the professor, the Daily Camera reported. More than 700 students, faculty and staff signed a letter demanding his dismissal.

At Chapman, more than 160 faculty members and members of the Board of Trustees also signed a letter demanding Eastman’s removal. Struppa denounced his rally speech, but argued that he didn’t have the power to fire him.

On Wednesday, Struppa said Eastman would retire immediatel­y and pledged not to go after the school in court.

Eastman said he was retiring due to a “hostile environmen­t” at the school due to the letter signed by his colleagues.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN AP ?? John Eastman (left) listens as Rudy Giuliani speaks at a rally in Washington on Jan. 6.
JACQUELYN MARTIN AP John Eastman (left) listens as Rudy Giuliani speaks at a rally in Washington on Jan. 6.

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