Trump Hits Back at Daughter’s Account That She
Accepted His Election Loss
The former president, responding to videotaped
testimony played at the Jan. 6 hearing, said Ivanka Trump had been “checked
out” and was not involved in studying the election results.
Maggie
Haberman
By Maggie
Haberman
June 10,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/10/us/politics/trump-ivanka-january-6-hearing.html
WASHINGTON
— Former President Donald J. Trump, long known for distancing himself from or
tossing aside staff members who contradicted him while he was in the White
House, discovered a new target on Friday: his elder daughter.
The morning
after the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol played
recorded video testimony of his daughter, Ivanka Trump, at its prime-time
public hearing, Mr. Trump used his social media website to separate himself
from what she had said and to say she was “checked out” during the final days
of his administration.
In the
testimony, Ms. Trump said she was influenced by a Dec. 1, 2020, statement by
William P. Barr, then the attorney general, that there was no widespread fraud
that had altered the outcome of the election. She testified that she respected
Mr. Barr and “accepted what he was saying.”
“Ivanka
Trump was not involved in looking at, or studying, Election results,” Mr. Trump
wrote on his social media website, Truth Social, in one of eight messages he
posted there in response to the hearing. “She had long since checked out and
was, in my opinion, only trying to be respectful to Bill Barr and his position
as Attorney General (he sucked!).”
Ms. Trump
was a senior adviser in the White House, and she continued to work in the
administration until the end. Her colleagues have recalled her being among
those urging White House staff members on election night to “fight” even as it
became clear that her father would most likely lose. Her husband, Jared
Kushner, who was also a senior adviser in the White House, attended several
meetings about postelection strategy with a range of political and West Wing
advisers, as well as lawyers like Rudolph W. Giuliani.
Pushing
back on his daughter’s comments was only one way in which Mr. Trump assailed
the hearing, the first in a series of sessions to be held by the House
committee this month.
He denied
having responded approvingly to the “Hang Mike Pence!” chants bellowed about
the vice president by some of the rioters at the Capitol on Jan. 6, an account
shared during the hearing by Representative Liz Cheney, Republican of Wyoming
and the panel’s vice chairwoman.
“I NEVER
said, or even thought of saying, ‘Hang Mike Pence,’” Mr. Trump wrote on the
social media site. “This is either a made up story by somebody looking to
become a star, or FAKE NEWS!”
Ms. Cheney
did not say he had used those words, but she quoted testimony that Mr. Trump
had responded to the chants by saying that “maybe our supporters have the right
idea” and that Mr. Pence “deserves it.”
In another
post on the site, Mr. Trump described the committee as a “totally partisan,
POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!” And in two other posts, he attacked Mr. Barr, calling
him a “coward,” “weak and frightened,” “stupid” and “scared stiff of being
impeached.”
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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