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Rudy Giuliani

Inside Rudy Giuliani's terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week

by Jon Skolnik

On Monday, the U.S. Treasury Department placed sanctions on seven foreign members of Rudy Giuliani's inner circle who sought to interfere in the U.S. election and sway the results in Trump's favor. The president has also reportedly dropped his reliance on Giuliani for his second impeachment trial, refusing to pay Giuliani for his unsuccessful post-election campaign to overturn November's results. Meanwhile, the New York State Bar Association has moved to disbar Giuliani this week. Needless to say, the week after he told thousands of Trump supporters to hold "trial by combat" before many of them violently stormed the U.S. Capitol with aims to halt the Constitutionally mandated certification of Joe Biden's Electoral College victory was a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week for Rudy Giuliani.

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Trump is fixated on Republicans defecting against him and backing impeachment: WSJ

President Donald Trump is "increasingly concerned" with Republicans who are deserting him following the violent coup attempt by his supporters.

"Shortly after becoming the first president in U.S. history to be impeached twice, President Trump summoned political advisers and demanded to know more about the 10 Republicans who had voted against him," The Wall Street Journal reported Friday. "Mr. Trump, who had feared an even larger number of defections, wanted to know who the lawmakers were and whether he had ever done anything for them, according to people familiar with the meeting. He also inquired who might run against them when they face re-election in two years, the people said."

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White House officials ‘blame’ Rudy Giuliani — for both of Trump’s impeachments: report

Rudy Giuliani has culpability for both of Donald Trump's impeachments, according to White House officials, The New York Times reported Thursday.

"White House officials are universally angry with Mr. Giuliani and blame him for both of Mr. Trump's impeachments. But the president is another story," the newspaper reported. "Even as he complains about Mr. Giuliani's latest efforts as fruitless, the president remains unusually deferential to him in public and in private. 'Don't underestimate him,' Mr. Trump has told advisers."

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Law professor who questioned Kamala Harris' citizenship pushed out of job after speaking at Trump's Capitol rally​

On Thursday, The Los Angeles Times reported that one of President Donald Trump's favorite law professors has been pushed out of his job after speaking at the D.C. rally that devolved into a violent invasion of the U.S. Capitol.

"John Eastman, an endowed professor and constitutional law scholar at Chapman, spoke alongside Trump's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani at the 'Save America' rally Jan. 6, making the unsubstantiated claim that 'secret folders' inside ballot-counting machines skewed both the presidential and Georgia Senate race results in Democrats' favor," said the report. "Chapman President Daniele Struppa said in a statement that the university and Eastman had reached an agreement and Eastman would retire immediately. Both parties agreed not to take any kind of legal action, including over claims of defamation, which Eastman had alleged."

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‘Isolated and angry’ Trump is raging in White House promising to ‘never’ admit Biden won: reports

President Donald Trump is "isolated and angry at aides for failing to defend him as he is impeached again," The Washington Post reveals in a report that is now trending on Twitter. And The Daily Beast adds that Trump "has repeatedly—sometimes unprompted—ruled out making any statements that Biden won, emphasizing that he will 'never' admit such a thing."

"Biden's decisive 2020 victory is 'bullshit,' Trump has added, that 'everyone' knows is a fiction," The Beast reports. "Trump is still going on and on behind closed doors about Dominion voting machine conspiracy theories and how he won in a landslide and therefore Biden is an illegitimate president."

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Trump betrayed Pence even though the VP 'ate garbage' from him for 4 years: CNN's Harwood

CNN White House correspondent John Harwood on Thursday said President Donald Trump has once again proven himself totally unable to take responsibility for anything even after ten members of his own party voted to impeach him on Wednesday.

In explaining Trump's continued refusal to concede that he lost the 2020 presidential election, Harwood argued that the president is "psychologically disfigured" and will never take responsibility for any failing.

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Trump faces 'long cold winter' of lawsuits over Capitol riot: MSNBC's Morning Joe

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough says President Donald Trump seems to understand he faces a "long, cold winter" of lawsuits once he leaves office, especially after becoming the first president to be impeached twice.

The president issued a video statement condemning the violence carried out by his supporters last week at the U.S. Capitol that was aimed at overturning his election loss, and Scarborough and his "Morning Joe" co-hosts agreed that was made at the recommendation of a more competent lawyer than Rudy Giuliani.

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Trump demands his staff not pay Giuliani's legal fees for helping him try to overturn the election: report

On Wednesday, The Washington Post reported that outgoing President Donald Trump is reluctant to pay his longtime friend and attorney Rudy Giuliani for his legal services in the election lawsuits — and has instructed staff not to approve the fees.

"Though Trump has been exceptionally furious with Vice President Pence, his relationship with lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, one of his most steadfast defenders, is also fracturing, according to people with knowledge of the dynamics between the men," reported Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey, and Ashley Parker. "Trump has instructed aides not to pay Giuliani's legal fees, two officials said, and has demanded that he personally approve any reimbursements for the expenses Giuliani incurred while traveling on the president's behalf to challenge election results in key states. They said Trump has privately expressed concern with some of Giuliani's moves and did not appreciate a demand from Giuliani for $20,000 a day in fees for his work attempting to overturn the election."

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Fascism expert: Strongman Trump radicalized his supporters -- turning this back will be very hard

Calls are also growing for Republican Senators Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley to be expelled or to resign for supporting Trump's effort to overturn the election and fanning the flames ahead of last week's insurrection, and authorities are warning about more right-wing violence ahead of Inauguration Day on January 20. Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a New York University historian whose work focuses on fascism, authoritarian leaders and propaganda, says the storming of the Capitol was "a logical result" of Trump's legitimization and encouragement of right-wing extremism since 2016. "The threat to democracy is not outside our institutions only. It's coming from inside," Ben-Ghiat says.

This interview first appeared on January 11, 2021

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Trump wants Rudy Giuliani and Alan Dershowitz to defend him in Senate impeachment trial: report

On CNN Wednesday, White House correspondent Kaitlan Collins reported that following the new impeachment for incitement of violence at the Capitol, President Donald Trump is hoping for Rudy Giuliani and Alan Dershowitz to help defend him in the Senate trial.

"There's no clear legal strategy developed for the president yet," said Collins. "Mitch McConnell said he will wait to hear the legal arguments. It's not clear if he has a legal team put together. He has been telling people, call Alan Dershowitz. We expect Rudy Giuliani to be involved. But that's really all we know so far, which is remarkably different than the last time the president was impeached. The question of what that's going to look like is that the president has been increasingly isolated from his top aides. Still remains to be seen."

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Lawmakers will deliberate over a deadly weapon used in the attack on Capitol Hill at impeachment hearing: Trump’s words

Five days after supporters of President Donald Trump attacked the Capitol building, the House of Representatives introduced a single article of impeachment against the president.

The article accuses Trump of incitement of insurrection for his continued propagation of lies and conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, as well as his violent rhetoric immediately preceding the attack on Capitol Hill. The article contends that Trump’s lies and rhetoric directly led to violence with the goal of undermining the counting of electoral votes.

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Rudy Giuliani's honorary degree revoked as college condemns his role in Capitol invasion

On Tuesday, CNN reported that Middlebury College, a liberal arts institution in Vermont, is rescinding Rudy Giuliani's honorary degree, which they awarded him in 2005.

College president Laurie Patton said the decision was made in light of Giuliani's involvement "in fomenting the violent uprising" at the U.S. Capitol last week.

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Pro-Trump attorneys face long-lasting consequences for lying about election results

Attorneys who pushed President Donald Trump's election-fraud claims in court face existential threats to their professional careers.

Sidney Powell and L. Lin Wood could be disbarred after lawyers for the city of Detroit asked a federal judge in Michigan to reprimand the pair, who worked with the Trump campaign, and refer them for disbarment and financial penalties, reported the Wall Street Journal.

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