Jan. 6 Panel Questions Cipollone on Pardons and
Trump’s Election Claims
Pat A. Cipollone, the former White House counsel for
President Donald J. Trump, appeared before the House committee investigating
the Capitol attack for roughly eight hours on Friday.
Luke
BroadwaterMaggie Haberman
By Luke
Broadwater and Maggie Haberman
July 9,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/09/us/politics/pat-cipollone-jan-6-trump.html
WASHINGTON
— Pat A. Cipollone, who served as White House counsel for President Donald J.
Trump, was asked detailed questions on Friday about pardons, false election
fraud claims and the former president’s pressure campaign against Vice
President Mike Pence, according to three people familiar with his testimony
before the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
The panel
did not press him to either corroborate or contradict some specific details of
explosive testimony by Cassidy Hutchinson, a former White House aide who
captivated the country late last month with her account of an out-of-control
president willing to embrace violence and stop at nothing to stay in power, the
people said.
During a
roughly eight-hour interview conducted behind closed doors in the O’Neill House
Office Building, the panel covered some of the same ground it did during an
informal interview with Mr. Cipollone in April. In the session on Friday, which
took place only after Mr. Cipollone was served with a subpoena, investigators
focused mainly on Mr. Cipollone’s views on the events of Jan. 6 and generally
did not ask about his views of other witnesses’ accounts.
Mr.
Cipollone, who fought against the most extreme plans to overturn the 2020 election
but has long held that his direct conversations with Mr. Trump are protected by
executive privilege and attorney-client privilege, invoked certain privileges
in declining to answer some of the committee’s questions.
Tim Mulvey,
a spokesman for the panel, said the committee “received critical testimony on
nearly every major topic in its investigation, reinforcing key points regarding
Donald Trump’s misconduct and providing highly relevant new information that
will play a central role in its upcoming hearings.”
“This
includes information demonstrating Donald Trump’s supreme dereliction of duty,”
Mr. Mulvey said. “The testimony also corroborated key elements of Cassidy
Hutchinson’s testimony.”
The panel
recorded Mr. Cipollone on video with potential plans to use clips of his
testimony at upcoming hearings. Aides have begun strategizing about whether and
where to adjust scripts to include key clips, one person said. The next hearing
is scheduled for Tuesday.
In the
interview, Mr. Cipollone was asked about Mr. Trump’s false claims of a stolen
election. The panel has asked similar questions of top Justice Department
officials, White House lawyers and Trump campaign officials, who have testified
that they did not agree with the effort to overturn the 2020 election.
Mr.
Cipollone also broke with Mr. Trump in response to questions about the former
president’s pressure campaign against Mr. Pence, which included personal
meetings, a profane phone call and even a post on Twitter attacking the vice
president as rioters stormed the Capitol pledging to hang him, people familiar
with the testimony said.
Mr.
Cipollone’s agreement to sit for an interview before the panel had prompted
speculation that his testimony could either buttress or contradict the account
of Ms. Hutchinson, who attributed some of the most damning statements about Mr.
Trump’s behavior to Mr. Cipollone. For instance, she testified that Mr.
Cipollone told her on the morning of Jan. 6 that Mr. Trump’s plan to accompany
the mob to the Capitol would cause Trump officials to be “charged with every
crime imaginable.”
Two people
familiar with Mr. Cipollone’s actions that day said he did not recall making
that comment to Ms. Hutchinson. Those people said the committee was made aware
before the interview that Mr. Cipollone would not confirm that conversation
were he to be asked. He was not asked about that specific statement on Friday,
according to people familiar with the questions.
“Why are
Pat Cipollone & his lawyers letting the J6 Committee get away with suborning
Cassidy Hutchinson’s perjury?” Mr. Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., who
has also testified before the panel, wrote on Twitter on Saturday. “Only
cowards let the Left bully them into sitting quietly instead of speaking up and
telling the truth. Stop hiding on background, Pat. Grow a spine & go on
record.”
Mr. Mulvey
said there was no “preinterview agreement to limit Cipollone’s testimony” and
any suggestion otherwise was “completely false.”
Among other
subjects, Mr. Cipollone was asked in the interview about conversations in which
presidential pardons were discussed.
Ms.
Hutchinson has testified that on Jan. 7, the day after the assault on the
Capitol, Mr. Trump wanted to promise pardons for those involved in the attack,
but Mr. Cipollone argued to remove language making such a promise from remarks
that the president was to deliver.
She has
also testified that members of Congress and others close to Mr. Trump sought
pardons after the violence of Jan. 6.
An adviser
to Mr. Cipollone declined to comment on his appearance before the panel.
“He was
candid with the committee,” Representative Zoe Lofgren, Democrat of California
and a member of the panel, said on CNN on Friday. “He was careful in his
answers, and I believe that he was honest in his answers.”
She added,
“We gained some additional insight into the actual day, Jan. 6.”
Ms. Lofgren
said Mr. Cipollone did not contradict other witnesses. “There were things that
he might not be present for or in some cases could not recall with precision,”
she said.
Mr.
Cipollone’s testimony came after he reached a deal to testify before the panel,
which had pressed him for weeks to cooperate and issued him a subpoena last
month.
Mr.
Cipollone was a witness to key moments in Mr. Trump’s push to overturn the
election results, including discussions about sending false letters to state
officials about election fraud and seizing voting machines. He was also in
direct contact with Mr. Trump on Jan. 6 as rioters stormed the Capitol.
Mr. Trump
has railed against Mr. Cipollone’s cooperation. On Thursday, he posted on his
social media platform, Truth Social: “Why would a future President of the
United States want to have candid and important conversations with his White
House Counsel if he thought there was even a small chance that this person,
essentially acting as a ‘lawyer’ for the Country, may someday be brought before
a partisan and openly hostile Committee in Congress.”
Luke
Broadwater covers Congress. He was the lead reporter on a series of investigative
articles at The Baltimore Sun that won a Pulitzer Prize and a George Polk Award
in 2020. @lukebroadwater
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent. She joined The Times in 2015 as a
campaign correspondent and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018
for reporting on President Trump’s advisers and their connections to Russia. @maggieNYT


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