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Jack Smith

Text messages show RNC chair pushed indicted Trump's voter fraud conspiracy with AZ's Kelli Ward: report

Barely twenty-four hours after United States Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith indicted ex-President Donald Trump for allegedly masterminding a plan to subvert American democracy after the 2020 election, previously undisclosed text messages between high-profile Republican operatives indicate a vastly broader plot than what Smith outlines in his complaint, according to a new report.

The communications were allegedly obtained exclusively by Talking Points Memo investigative reporter Hunter Walker, who on Wednesday reported "paint a picture of what was going on behind the scenes in the White House during the crucial period the special prosecutor has zeroed in on. In particular, they reveal that Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and former Arizona Republican Party Chairwoman Kelli Ward were among those who played key roles in elements of the alleged conspiracy from the moment Smith said it began."

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'Harebrained': GOP strategist says new indictment shows Trump 'left reality'

The scheme to appoint fake electors to throw out the real votes in 2020 was so "harebrained," and former President Donald Trump's state of mind so delusional, that it is unnerving how close the coup came to actually working, Republican strategist Rick Tyler articulated on MSNBC Wednesday evening.

This comes as former President Donald Trump faces conspiracy and witness tampering charges in the long-running January 6 investigation by special counsel Jack Smith — with the fake elector plot taking a central role in the case.

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John Eastman's lawyer says his client would cooperate with Jack Smith – but not 'flip' on Trump

An attorney representing John Eastman, a co-conspirator in the indictment against Donald Trump over the former president’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, said Wednesday that Eastman would consider cooperating with prosecutors – with or without immunity.

Charles Burnham during an appearance on CNN’s “Erin Burnett OutFront” made it clear that his client, a former Trump attorney, wouldn’t turn on the former president.

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How the 'fake electors' in seven states are central to the Trump Jan. 6 indictment

WASHINGTON — The federal indictment accusing Donald Trump of trying to stay in power after losing the 2020 presidential election includes detailed accusations of Trump and his alleged co-conspirators’ pressure on individual state officials.

The central plot to overturn the election, as described in the indictment a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., handed up Tuesday, involved switching out legitimate slates of electors in multiple states Joe Biden had won with false electors recruited by Trump and his advisers.

The sweeping indictment also accuses Trump and six co-conspirators of using the U.S. Justice Department to falsely insinuate that there were legitimate concerns with the elections in each state and presenting dueling slates of electors to Vice President Mike Pence to create a false controversy about which electors to count.

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DeSantis pledges to 'start slitting throats on day one' amid campaign reboot

Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, two weeks into the reboot of his ten-week-old presidential campaign, pledged to New Hampshire voters this week he will root out the “deep state” from the federal government, and “start slitting throats on Day One.”

“DeSantis just wrapped up a three-day trip to New Hampshire, his first since downsizing his campaign due to financial problems. On the ground, it was clear the challenges he faces here remain significant, even as his chief rival confronts major legal problems,” New Hampshire Public Radio reports.

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'You ain't seen nothin' yet': Nicolle Wallace says Trump will dial up the 'bat-bleep crazy'

Former President Donald Trump will kick the crazy up to an entirely new level as he navigates all the criminal indictments to try to win a second term in 2024, MSNBC anchor Nicolle Wallace warned in a discussion with former President Barack Obama adviser Ben Rhodes.

This comes after reports that Trump, and Republican-aligned institutions and strategists close to him like the Heritage Foundation, are planning to dismantle all the guardrails that check the power of the executive branch if he manages to retake the office.

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Jack Smith 'looks forward' to proving Trump knew he was lying: First Amendment lawyer

Former President Donald Trump has no leg to stand on trying to argue that the First Amendment protects him from the January 6 prosecution, constitutional attorney Floyd Abrams explained on CNN Wednesday evening.

"So the burden of proof is on Jack Smith, the special counsel, his team, to prove that Trump knew that these election fraud allegations were false," said anchor Jake Tapper. "Will that be difficult?"

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Trump: Pence 'didn’t understand' he 'had power' to overturn the election

Twenty-four hours before he is slated to appear before a federal judge in Washington, D.C. to be arraigned on four felony charges related to his alleged efforts to remain in office despite the results of the 2020 election, Donald Trump alleged his then-Vice President, Mike Pence, had the power to help him overturn that election.

As The New York Times notes, special counsel Jack Smith’s indictment accuses Trump of “three conspiracies: one to defraud the United States; a second to obstruct an official government proceeding, the certification of the Electoral College vote; and a third to deprive people of a civil right, the right to have their votes counted. Mr. Trump was also charged with a fourth count of obstructing or attempting to obstruct an official proceeding.

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Rudy Giuliani: What Trump indictment in Jan. 6 probe means for ‘co-conspirator 1′

Rudy Giuliani has gone from America’s mayor to “co-conspirator 1.” The former New York City mayor plays a leading role in the gripping story laid out by special counsel Jack Smith in his indictment of former President Donald Trump in the Jan. 6 probe. But it’s not yet clear if he will face the music for his role in the alleged scheme to overturn the 2020 election, or alternately might even flip and cooperate against Trump. Giuliani is described in the indictment as “an attorney who was willing to spread knowingly false claims and the pursue strategies that (Trump’s) campaign attorneys would no...

'Didn't know any better': Columnist argues Trump's strategy should be that he believed his own claims

A potential Donald Trump defense strategy has emerged since he was indicted for efforts to overturn the 2020 election, a Washington Post columnist wrote Wednesday – plead ignorance.

The Washington Post’s Aaron Blake notes that Trump’s defenders in the immediate aftermath of the newest charges against the former president have signaled a “didn’t know any better” legal strategy.

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Trump's suspected sixth co-conspirator named by the New York Times

New clues have emerged that likely indicate the identity of the “mystery” co-conspirator 6 in the indictment against Donald Trump in the election interference case, The New York Times reports.

The report cites a review of the indictment and of messages from those on the former president’s team, which pointed Times reporters to a person they believe it is.

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Jack Smith’s ‘star witness’ Mike Pence tells audience in Indiana he doesn’t want to talk about ‘news of the day’

Former Vice President Mike Pence, struggling to make the cut for the first Republican presidential debate later this month, told a small audience in his home state of Indiana he does not want to “talk about the news of the day,” an apparent reference to the third and most consequential indictment of his former boss, Donald Trump, this time for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

On Tuesday Pence released a statement on the indictment, mentioning Trump just one time, near the end.

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Trump expected to appear in person for D.C. arraignment on Jan. 6 charges: report

Donald Trump is expected to appear in person for his arraignment in a Washington D.C. federal court Thursday on charges that he conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in the run-up to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, The Washington Post reports.

The former president was indicted Tuesday on four counts including conspiracy to defraud the nation. It's Trump’s third criminal case.

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