Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Jan. 6 committee subpoenas fake Trump electors

- By Farnoush Amiri

WASHINGTON — The House committee investigat­ing the U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on subpoenaed more than a dozen individual­s Friday who it says falsely tried to declare Donald Trump the winner of the 2020 election in seven swing states.

The panel is demanding informatio­n and testimony from 14 people who it says allegedly met and submitted false Electoral College certificat­es declaring Mr. Trump the winner of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, New Mexico, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, according to a letter from Mississipp­i Rep. Bennie Thompson, the committee’s Democratic chairman. President Joe Biden won all seven states.

“We believe the individual­s we have subpoenaed today have informatio­n about how these so-called alternate electors met and who was behind that scheme,” Mr. Thompson said in the letter. “We encourage them to cooperate with the Select Committee’s investigat­ion to get answers about January 6th for the American people and help ensure nothing like that day ever happens again.”

The nine-member panel said it has obtained informatio­n that groups of individual­s met on Dec. 14, 2020 — more than a month after Election Day — in the seven states.

The individual­s, according to the congressio­nal investigat­ion, then submitted fake slates of Electoral College votes for Mr. Trump. Then “alternate electors” from those seven states sent those certificat­es to Congress, where several of Mr. Trump’s advisers used them to justify delaying or blocking the certificat­ion of the election during the joint session of Congress on Jan. 6, 2021.

Lies about election fraud from the former president and his allies fueled the deadly insurrecti­on on the Capitol building that day, as a violent mob interrupte­d the certificat­ion of the Electoral College results.

Last March, American Oversight, a watchdog group, obtained the certificat­es in question that were submitted by Republican­s in the seven states. In two of them, New Mexico and Pennsylvan­ia, the fake electors added a caveat saying the certificat­e was submitted in case they were later recognized as duly elected, qualified electors.

That would only have been possible if Mr. Trump had won any of the several dozens of legal battles he waged against those states in the weeks after the election.

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