Damned by his own words: Democrats follow Trump's
wide-open multimedia trail
Sketch: House impeachment managers have no trouble
painting a picture of Trump’s well-documented role in Capitol attack
David Smith
David Smith
in Washington
@smithinamerica
Wed 10 Feb
2021 23.03 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/10/trump-impeachment-trial-evidence-video-tweets
As US
president, Donald Trump seemed be talking and tweeting 24 hours a day. That has
thrown his near total absence from public life over the past three weeks into
sharp relief. The Silence of the Tweets.
It also
means that when clips of Trump’s rally speeches filled the Senate chamber on
day two of his impeachment trial on Wednesday, his voice was jarring and
jangling in the ear, like a blowhard from a cruder, coarser time.
His
speeches, tweets and phone calls were replayed incessantly as the House
impeachment managers put their case against him. Seldom has an accused been so
damned by their own words. In his fiery claims of a stolen election, his
exhortations to “fight like hell” and his failure to denounce hate groups such
as the Proud Boys, Trump proved the star witness in his own prosecution.
The
spectacular irony was that a man who thrived on grabbing attention on TV and
social media had left a trail of digital clues that ought to lead all the way
to conviction. It was the 21st-century equivalent of a Victorian diary in which
the master criminal brags about how he did it.
“Trump’s
worst problem?” tweeted David Axelrod, former chief campaign strategist for
Barack Obama. “Videotape.”
It helped
Jamie Raskin and his fellow House impeachment managers build a case that this
incitement did not begin on 6 January, the day of the insurrection at the US
Capitol, but over months of spinning election lies and cheering on political
violence.
Wearing
grey suit, white shirt, deep blue tie, and wielding a blue pen in his right
hand, Raskin told the Senate: “He revelled in it and he did nothing to help us
as commander-in-chief. Instead he served as the inciter-in-chief, sending
tweets that only further incited the rampaging mob. He made statements lauding
and sympathising with the insurrectionists.”
Congressman
Joe Neguse displayed clips of Trump addressing rallies in October where he said
he could only lose the election if it was stolen. “Remember he had that no-lose
scenario,” Neguse said. “He told his base that the election was stolen.” Such
beliefs fueled the so-called “stop the steal” campaign.
Another
impeachment manager, Eric Swalwell, pored over Trump’s tweets, a goldmine for
the prosecution. Among the many examples: the then president retweeted Kylie
Jane Kremer, founder of a “Stop the Steal” Facebook group, who promised that
“the cavalry” was coming.
Swalwell
told the senators, who sit at 100 wooden desks on a tiered semicircular
platform, that there is “overwhelming” evidence: “President Trump’s conduct
leading up to January 6 was deliberate, planned and premeditated. This was not
one speech, not one tweet. It was dozens in rapid succession with the specific
details. He was acting as part of the host committee.”
Swalwell
added: “This was never about one speech. He built this mob over many months
with repeated messaging until they believed they had been robbed of their vote
and they would do anything to stop the certification. He made them believe that
their victory was stolen and incited them so he could use them to steal the
election for himself.”
The trial
heard Trump pressuring Brad Raffensperger, the Georgia secretary of state, to
overturn his election defeat in the state. Congresswoman Madeleine Dean said:
“We must not become numb to this. Trump did this across state after state so
often, so loudly, so publicly. All because Trump wanted to remain in power.”
Her
colleague Stacey Plaskett of the Virgin Islands noted an incident last October
when dozens of trucks covered in Trump campaign regalia “confronted and
surrounded” a Biden-Harris campaign bus traveling from San Antonio to Austin in
Texas.
“What that
video that you just saw does not show is that the bus they tried to run off of
the road was filled with young campaign staff, volunteers, supporters,
surrogates, people,” she said.
And as the
saying goes, there’s always a tweet. Plaskett highlighted that a day later,
Trump tweeted a video of the episode with the caption, “I LOVE TEXAS.”
Plaskett
also played a clip of Trump at a presidential debate, telling the Proud Boys to
“stand back and stand by” when asked to condemn white supremacists. They heard
him “loud and clear”, she said, and even used the slogan on their merchandise.
Several members of the Proud Boys have been charged in connection with the
riots.
Later,
Plaskett presented chilling audio and video evidence, some of it never made
public before, that she said displayed the consequences of Trump’s incendiary
words. Capitol police and law enforcement could be heard pleading for backup as
the mob closed in. An officer could be seen running past Senator Mitt Romney
and warning him to turn around, then Romney was seen breaking into a run to
safety.
Trump’s
political career was always like a child playing with matches. On 6 January, he
started a fire. And as Wednesday’s hearing demonstrated, if he ever builds a
presidential library and museum, there will be no shortage of multimedia
material.


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