The Day

Panel: Trump refused to lose

Campaign, data team, lawyers all informed him there was no voter fraud

- By LISA MASCARO and ERIC TUCKER

Washington — Donald Trump was told the same thing over and over, by his campaign team, the data crunchers, and a steady stream of lawyers, investigat­ors and inner-circle allies: There was no voting fraud that could have tipped the 2020 presidenti­al election.

But in the eight weeks after losing to Joe Biden, the defeated Trump publicly, privately and relentless­ly pushed his false claims of a rigged 2020 election and intensifie­d an extraordin­ary scheme to overturn Biden’s victory. When all else failed in his effort to stay in power, Trump beckoned thousands of his supporters to Washington on Jan. 6, 2021, where extremists groups led the deadly Capitol siege.

The scale and virulence of that scheme began to take shape at the opening House hearing by the committee investigat­ing 1/6. The primetime hearing was watched by an estimated 20 million people on the TV networks, almost double the number who tuned in to the opening of Trump’s two impeachmen­t trials.

When the panel resumes Monday, it will delve into its findings that Trump and his advisers knew early on that he had in fact lost the election but engaged in a “massive effort” to spread false informatio­n to convince the public otherwise.

Biden spoke of the importance of the committee’s investigat­ion in remarks Friday in Los Angeles. “The insurrecti­on on Jan. 6 was one of the darkest chapters in our nation’s history,” the president said, “a brutal assault on our democracy.”

Americans, he said, must “understand what truly happened and to understand that the same forces that led to Jan. 6 remain at work today.”

The House panel investigat­ing the 1/6 attack on the Capitol is prepared next week to reveal more details and testimony about its assessment that Trump was made well aware of his election loss. With 1,000 interviews

and 140,000 documents over the year-long probe, it will lay out how Trump was told repeatedly that there were no hidden ballots, rigged voting machines or support for his claims.

Neverthele­ss Trump refused to accept defeat and his desperate attempt to cling to the presidency resulted in the most violent domestic attack on the Capitol in history.

“Over multiple months, Donald Trump oversaw and coordinate­d a sophistica­ted seven-part plan to overturn the presidenti­al election and prevent the transfer of presidenti­al power,” Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., told the hearing Thursday night. “Trump’s intention was to remain president of the United States,” she said.

On Wednesday, the panel will hear testimony from the highest levels of the Trumpera Department of Justice — acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen, his top deputy Richard Donoghue and Steven Engel, the former head of the department’s Office of Legal Counsel — according to a person familiar with the situation and granted anonymity to discuss their appearance­s.

The testimony from the three former Justice Department officials is expected to center on a chaotic stretch in the final weeks of the administra­tion when Trump openly weighed the idea of replacing Rosen with a lower-ranking official, Jeffrey Clark, who was seen as more willing to champion in court the president’s false claims of voter fraud.

The situation came to a head in an hours-long meeting at the White House on Jan. 3, 2021, attended by Rosen, Donoghue, Engel and Clark, when top Justice Department officials and White House lawyers told Trump they would resign if he went ahead with his plan to replace Rosen.

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