NEWS
ANALYSIS
Trump Is Depicted as a Would-Be Autocrat Seeking
to Hang Onto Power at All Costs
As the Jan. 6 committee outlined during its prime-time
hearing, Donald J. Trump executed a seven-part conspiracy to overturn a free
and fair democratic election.
Former President Donald J. Trump and his supporters
have dismissed the panel’s work as a partisan smear attempt.
Peter Baker
By Peter
Baker
June 9,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/09/us/politics/trump-jan-6-hearing.html
In the
entire 246-year history of the United States, there was surely never a more
damning indictment presented against an American president than outlined on
Thursday night in a cavernous congressional hearing room where the future of
democracy felt on the line.
Other
presidents have been accused of wrongdoing, even high crimes and misdemeanors,
but the case against Donald J. Trump mounted by the bipartisan House committee
investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol described not just a
rogue president but a would-be autocrat willing to shred the Constitution to
hang onto power at all costs.
As the
committee portrayed it during its prime-time televised hearing, Mr. Trump
executed a seven-part conspiracy to overturn a free and fair democratic
election. According to the panel, he lied to the American people, ignored all
evidence refuting his false fraud claims, pressured state and federal officials
to throw out election results favoring his challenger, encouraged a violent mob
to storm the Capitol and even signaled support for the execution of his own
vice president.
“Jan. 6 was
the culmination of an attempted coup, a brazen attempt, as one rioter put it
shortly after Jan. 6, to overthrow the government,” said Representative Bennie
Thompson, Democrat of Mississippi and the chairman of the select committee.
“The violence was no accident. It represents Trump’s last stand, most desperate
chance to halt the transfer of power.”
Most
incriminating were the words of Mr. Trump’s own advisers and appointees, played
over video on a giant screen above the committee dais and beamed out to a
national television audience. There was his own attorney general who told him
that his false election claims were “bullshit.” There was his own campaign
lawyer who testified that there was no evidence of fraud sufficient to change
the outcome. And there was his own daughter, Ivanka Trump, who acknowledged
that she accepted the conclusion that the election was not, in fact, stolen as
her father kept claiming.
Much of the
evidence was outlined by the lead Republican on the committee, Representative
Liz Cheney of Wyoming, who has been ostracized by Mr. Trump and much of her own
party for consistently denouncing his actions after the election. Unwavering,
she sketched out the case and then addressed her fellow Republicans who have
chosen to stand by their defeated former president and excuse his actions.
“I say this
to my Republican colleagues who are defending the indefensible: There will come
a day when Donald Trump is gone but your dishonor will remain,” she said.
Many of the
details were previously reported, and many questions about Mr. Trump’s actions
were left unanswered for now, but Ms. Cheney pulled together the committee’s
central findings in relentless, prosecutorial fashion.
Some of the
new revelations and the confirmations of recent news reports were enough to
prompt gasps in the room and, perhaps, in living rooms across the country. Told
that the crowd on Jan. 6 was chanting “Hang Mike Pence,” the vice president who
defied the president’s pressure to single-handedly block the transfer of power,
Mr. Trump was quoted responding, “Maybe our supporters have the right idea.”
Mike Pence, he added, “deserves it.”
Ms. Cheney,
the panel’s vice chairwoman, reported that in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack,
members of Mr. Trump’s own cabinet discussed invoking the 25th Amendment to
remove the president from office. She disclosed that Representative Scott Perry
of Pennsylvania and “multiple other Republican congressmen” involved in trying
to overturn the election sought pardons from Mr. Trump in his final days in
office.
She played
a video clip of Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser
who absented himself after the election rather than fight the conspiracy
theorists egging on Mr. Trump, cavalierly dismissing threats by Pat A.
Cipollone, the White House counsel, and other lawyers to resign in protest. “I
took it up to just be whining, to be honest with you,” Mr. Kushner testified.
And she
noted that while Mr. Pence repeatedly took action to summon help to stop the
mob on Jan. 6, the president himself made no such effort. Instead, his White
House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, tried to convince Gen. Mark A. Milley, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to pretend that Mr. Trump was actively
involved.
“He said,
‘We have to kill the narrative that the vice president is making all the
decisions,’” General Milley said in videotaped testimony. “‘We need to
establish the narrative that the president is still in charge, and that things
are steady or stable,’ or words to that effect. I immediately interpreted that
as politics, politics, politics.”
Mr. Trump
had no allies on the nine-member House committee, andhe and his supporters have
dismissed the panel’s work as a partisan smear attempt. On Fox News, which
opted not to show the hearing, Sean Hannity was busy changing the subject,
attacking the committee for not focusing on the breakdown in security at the
Capitol, which he mainly blamed on Speaker Nancy Pelosi even though Senator
Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, then the Republican majority leader, shared control
of the building with her at the time.
Before the
hearing, Mr. Trump tried again to rewrite history by casting the attack on the
Capitol as a legitimate manifestation of public grievance against a stolen
election. “January 6th was not simply a protest, it represented the greatest
movement in the history of our Country to Make America Great Again,” he wrote
on his new social media site.
Mr. Trump
is hardly the first president reproached for misconduct, lawbreaking or even
violating the Constitution. Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton were both impeached
by the House, although acquitted by the Senate. John Tyler sided with the
Confederacy during the Civil War. Richard M. Nixon resigned under the threat of
impeachment for abusing his power to cover up corrupt campaign activities.
Warren G. Harding had the Teapot Dome scandal and Ronald Reagan the Iran-contra
affair.
But the
crimes alleged in most of those cases paled in comparison to what Mr. Trump is
accused of, and while Mr. Tyler turned on the country he once led, he died
before he could be held accountable. Mr. Nixon faced hearings during Watergate
not unlike those that began on Thursday night and was involved in other
scandals beyond the burglary that ultimately resulted in his downfall. But the
brazen dishonesty and incitement of violence put on display on Thursday
eclipsed even his misdeeds, according to many scholars.
Mr. Trump,
of course, was impeached twice already, and acquitted twice, the second time
for his role in the Jan. 6 attack. But even so, the case against him now is far
more extensive and expansive, after the committee conducted some 1,000
interviews and obtained more than 100,000 pages of documents.
What the
committee was trying to prove was that this was not a president with reasonable
concerns about fraud or a protest that got out of control. Instead, the panel
was trying to build the case that Mr. Trump was involved in a criminal
conspiracy against democracy — that he knew there was no widespread fraud
because his own people told him, that he intentionally summoned a mob to stop
the transfer of power to Joseph R. Biden Jr. and that he sat by and did
virtually nothing once the attack commenced.
Whether the
panel can change public views of those events remains unclear, but many
political strategists and analysts consider it unlikely. With a more fragmented
media and a more polarized society, most Americans have decided what they think
about Jan. 6 and are only listening to those who share their attitudes.
Still,
there was another audience for the hearings as they got underway, and that was
Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. If the committee was laying out what it
considered an indictment against the former president, it seemed to be inviting
the Justice Department to pursue the real kind in a grand jury and court of
law.
As she
previewed the story that will be told in the weeks to come, Ms. Cheney all but
wrote the script for Mr. Garland. “You will hear about plots to commit
seditious conspiracy on Jan. 6,” she said, “a crime defined in our laws as
conspiring to overthrow, put down or destroy by force the government of the
United States or to oppose by force the authority thereof.”
But if Mr.
Garland disagrees and the hearings this month turn out to be the only trial Mr.
Trump ever faces for his efforts to overturn the election, Ms. Cheney and her
fellow committee members were resolved to make sure that they will at least win
a conviction with the jury of history.
Peter Baker
is the chief White House correspondent and has covered the last five presidents
for The Times and The Washington Post. He also is the author of six books, most
recently "The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker
III." @peterbakernyt • Facebook




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