The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

What’s next for Trump’s legal team?

- Byron York Byron York is chief political correspond­ent for The Washington Examiner.

THE TRUMP CAMPAIGN’ S TOP LAWYERS» Rudy Giulia ni, Sidney powell, Jenna Ellis—went into last weekend on the offensive.

They held a news conference vowing to prove the existence of a far- ranging conspiracy to defeat the president. They were pressing a case alleging unfair voting practices in Pennsylvan­ia. They were predicting victory.

A couple of days later everything had changed.

A judge threw out the Pennsylvan­ia case. Then, amid widespread skepticism, Powell, the author of a theory that voting machines had changed millions of Trump votes into Biden votes, was booted from the team, leaving an uncertain future. First, Pennsylvan­ia.

No one should be surprised that Trump lost. The suit was against the Pennsylvan­ia secretary of state, Kathy Boockvar, and seven individual counties. It relied on two plaintiffs— two Pennsylvan­ia menwho saidtheirm­ail- inballots hadbeen canceled for technical reasons, and theywere not given a chance to correct them.

The judge agreed that the two men had suffered what is called an “injury in fact” — that is, their votes had not counted. But the problem was, neitherman lived in any of the seven counties the Trump campaign named as defendants in the case. So none of the defendant counties had had anything to do with the ballots in question. In addition, the suit did not tie the plaintiffs’ situation to Boockvar.

So none of the defendants had anything to dowith the plaintiffs’ complaints.

Neverthele­ss, the Trump campaign had sought to stop certificat­ion of Pennsylvan­ia’s results, set for Tuesday of this week. Roughly 6.9 million people voted inthe state, with Joe biden winning by 81,000 votes. There was noway the judge was going to do that, based on two voters in a case in which the Trump campaign didn’t even sue the right counties.

So the judge threw it out. The Trump campaign lost the appeal.

But that wasn’t theworst of it. Powell had alleged that therewas an internatio­nal conspiracy, fueled by “the massive influence of Communist money through Venezuela, Cuba and likely china ,” to overturn a trump victory in the election. She alleged that the dominion voting system and Smart ma tic software, originally developed for Venezuelan strong man hugo Chavez, had flipped hundreds of thousands or even millions of votes for donald trump to joe bid en.

She said that shewould prove Trump “won by a landslide.”

When journalist­s, notably Fox

News’ Tucker Carlson, asked Powell to provide some evidence to back up her charge, she refused. That led to a weird divide among some Trump supporters. Journalist­s questioned Powell’s case, while some supporters attacked the journalist­s, saying Powell had the evidence but had no obligation to reveal it to the public.

It would all come out in court, they said.

Then Powell went even further. She appeared on Newsmax, where she alleged that the Republican governor of Georgia, Brian Kemp, and the Republican secretary of state, Brad Raffensper­ger, were “in on the Dominion scam.” She said kemp and raffensper­ger had accepted payoffs as part of the conspiracy.

Powell finally went too far. Shewas accusing Georgia’s top officials of bribery, but would not offer any evidence other than she had “been told” therewas evidence. Within 24 hours, the Trump legal team sent out this brief press release: “Sidney Powell is practicing law on her own. She isnot a member of the Trump legal team. She is also not a lawyer for the president in his personal capacity.”

Powell was out, although she can certainly continue to act on her own, as another pro- Trump lawyer, Georgia’s Linwood, is doing. But where that leaves her theory and vow to “blow up” Georgia is unclear.

Speaking of Georgia, Powell’s antics on behalf of the president’s team threatened to roi land divide republican­s in the state that is vitally important to the GOP right now. Georgia means everything. Its two Senate runoff races on Jan. 5 will determine who will control the Senate in the first two years of the Biden presidency. If Republican­s control the Senate, they can stop Biden’s agenda cold and, in the process, preserve some of Trump’s legacy.

If Democrats win the Senate, with their narrow control of the House, there are almost no limits on what they can do.

So it was politicall­y ill- advised — some would say crazy— to seek to “blow up” Georgia. The goal for Republican­s is to win Georgia.

Theywill not do that by accusing the state’s Republican governor, who is a strong supporter of the president, of corruption. They will not do that by alleging that hundreds of thousands of Georgians had their votes secretly changed by software from Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela. Instead, they will win Georgia by campaignin­g there and by supporting the two Republican senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, who are running.

It appears the white house might have finally figured that out.

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