The Guardian (USA)

Capitol attack panel obtains PowerPoint that set out plan for Trump to stage coup

- Hugo Lowell in Washington

Former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows turned over to the House select committee investigat­ing the 6 January Capitol attack a PowerPoint recommendi­ng Donald Trump to declare a national security emergency in order to return himself to the presidency.

The fact that Meadows was in possession of a PowerPoint the day before the Capitol attack that detailed ways to stage a coup suggests he was at least aware of efforts by Trump and his allies to stop Joe Biden’s certificat­ion from taking place on 6 January.

The PowerPoint, titled “Election Fraud, Foreign Interferen­ce & Options for 6 Jan”, made several recommenda­tions for Trump to pursue in order to retain the presidency for a second term on the basis of lies and debunked conspiraci­es about widespread election fraud.

Meadows turned over a version of the PowerPoint presentati­on that he received in an email and spanned 38 pages, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The Guardian reviewed a second, 36-page version of the PowerPoint marked for disseminat­ion with 5 January metadata, which had some difference­s with what the select committee received. But the title of the PowerPoint and its recommenda­tions remained the same, the source said.

Senators and members of Congress should first be briefed about foreign interferen­ce, the PowerPoint said, at which point Trump could declare a national emergency, declare all electronic voting invalid, and ask Congress to agree on a constituti­onally acceptable remedy.

The PowerPoint also outlined three options for then vice-president Mike Pence to abuse his largely ceremonial role at the joint session of Congress on 6 January, when Biden was to be certified president, and unilateral­ly return Trump to the White House.

Pence could pursue one of three options, the PowerPoint said: seat Trump slates of electors over the objections of Democrats in key states, reject the Biden slates of electors, or delay the certificat­ion to allow for a “vetting” and counting of only “legal paper ballots”.

The final option for Pence is similar to an option that was simultaneo­usly being advanced on 4 and 5 January by Trump lieutenant­s – led by lawyers Rudy Giuliani and John Eastman, as well as Trump strategist Steve Bannon – working from the Willard hotel in Washington DC.

The Guardian revealed last week that sometime between the late evening of 5 January and the early hours of 6 January, after Pence declined to go ahead with such plans, Trump then pressed his lieutenant­s about how to stop Biden’s certificat­ion from taking place entirely.

The recommenda­tions in the PowerPoint for both Trump and Pence were based on wild and unsubstant­iated claims of election fraud, including that “the Chinese systematic­ally gained control over our election system” in eight key battlegrou­nd states.

The then acting attorney general, Jeff Rosen, and his predecesso­r, Bill Barr, who had both been appointed by Trump, by 5 January had already determined that there was no evidence of voter fraud sufficient to change the outcome of the 2020 election.

House investigat­ors said that they became aware of the PowerPoint after it surfaced in more than 6,000 documents Meadows turned over to the select committee. The PowerPoint was to be presented “on the Hill”, a reference to Congress, the panel said.

The PowerPoint was presented on 4 January to a number of Republican senators and members of Congress, the source said. Trump’s lawyers working at the Willard hotel were not shown the presentati­on, according to a source familiar with the matter.

But the select committee said they did find in the materials turned over by Meadows, his text messages with a member of Congress, who told Meadows about a “highly controvers­ial” plan to send slates of electors for Trump to the joint session of Congress. Meadows replied: “I love it.”

Trump’s former White House chief of staff had turned over the materials to the select committee until the cooperatio­n deal broke down on Tuesday, when Meadows’ attorney, Terwillige­r, abruptly told House investigat­ors that Meadows would no longer help the investigat­ion.

The select committee announced on Wednesday that in response, it would refer Meadows for criminal prosecutio­n for defying a subpoena. The chairman of the select committee, Bennie Thompson, said the vote to hold Meadows in contempt of Congress would come next week.

“The select committee will meet next week to advance a report recommendi­ng that the House cite Mr Meadows for contempt of Congress and refer him to the Department of Justice for prosecutio­n,” Thompson said in a statement.

 ?? Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters ?? Trump at a rally in Wisconsin in November last year. The recommenda­tions in the PowerPoint were based on unsubstant­iated claims of election fraud.
Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters Trump at a rally in Wisconsin in November last year. The recommenda­tions in the PowerPoint were based on unsubstant­iated claims of election fraud.

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