The Guardian (USA)

Republican attorneys general condemned over robocall that urged march to Capitol

- Kenya Evelyn in Washington

Leaders from the Republican Attorneys General Associatio­n face mounting criticism after sending out a robocall that urged supporters of Donald Trump to join the 6 January march on the US Capitol that resulted in a deadly insurrecti­on.

“At [1pm''] we will march to the Capitol building and call on Congress to stop the steal,” a robocall from the Rule of Law Defense Fund (RLDF), a fundraisin­g arm of the Republican Attorneys General Associatio­n, said.

The voice then said: “We are hoping patriots like you will join us to continue the fight to protect the integrity of our election.”

The associatio­n’s chair, Georgia attorney general Chris Carr, is now among several officials who claim to have “had no knowledge or involvemen­t in this decision”, distancing themselves from or outright condemning the call.

“The stance of the protesters was not consistent with [the attorney general’s] position on election fraud,” Carr spokespers­on Katie Byrd told NBC News. “He has been saying since moments after seeing news break, the violence and destructio­n we saw at the US Capitol is unacceptab­le and unAmerican.”

Alabama attorney general Steve Marshall, who oversees the RLDF, said in a statement that he “was unaware of unauthoriz­ed decisions made by RLDF staff”, saying that “despite currently transition­ing into [his] role” it was “unacceptab­le that [he] was neither consulted about nor informed of those decisions”.

Marshall added he had called for an internal review.

The Democratic Attorneys General Associatio­nhas rejected the Republican defense, releasing a statement highlighti­ng Republican leaders who they say incited the violence by taking up the president’s long-debunked claims of election fraud.

“The Republican [attorneys general] who blindly take their support have no legal or moral ground on which to stand here,” co-chairs Maura Healey of Massachuse­tts and Aaron Ford of Nevada wrote.

According to Documented, the watchdog group who posted the robocall online, the rally’s promotiona­l website lists the Rule of Law Defense Fund as one of the participat­ing organizati­ons. As of Monday, it had been taken down.

The Democratic attorneys general also said that the Republican associatio­n’s “former chair spoke at the rally that incited the mob,”pinpointin­gTexas attorney general Ken Paxton, and that “former [Missouri attorney general] Josh Hawley led the effort in Congress to undermine the election”.

Paxton and now senator Hawley have championed Trump’s disproved claims of voter fraud in the form of failed lawsuits and legislativ­e challenges.

The robocalls are the latest in mounting backlash Republican officials have encountere­d for their roles at Wednesday’s “March to Save America” rally, where Trump and allies urged supporters to reject his election loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

Thousands of rioters then stormed the Capitol in a resulting insurrecti­on that killed five people, including a Capitol police officer. A second officer who responded to the call died days later.

Although many Republican­s lawmakers have sharply criticized the insurrecti­on, several prominent allies have refused to condemn Trump and have rebuffed calls to impeach the president.

 ?? Photograph: Ardavan Roozbeh/Zuma/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? The call from the Rule of Law Defense Fund said: ‘We are hoping patriots like you will join us to continue the fight to protect the integrity of our election.’
Photograph: Ardavan Roozbeh/Zuma/Rex/Shuttersto­ck The call from the Rule of Law Defense Fund said: ‘We are hoping patriots like you will join us to continue the fight to protect the integrity of our election.’

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