Nate
Gowdy
for
Rolling
Stone |
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Trump’s
Jan. 6
role
back in
focus as
he
readies
new
stolen
election
claims
By Amy
Gardner,
Josh
Dawsey
8-10
minute
Former
president
Donald
Trump’s
effort
to
overturn
his loss
four
years
ago and
his role
inciting
the
violent
attack
on the
Capitol
roared
onto the
2024
campaign
stage
this
week
even as
he
continues
to
suggest
he won’t
accept a
defeat
if it
happens
a second
time.
On
Tuesday,
running
mate JD
Vance
declined
to say
during
the
vice-presidential
debate
that
Trump
lost in
2020. On
Wednesday,
special
counsel
Jack
Smith
filed an
explosive
new
pleading
in
federal
court
surfacing
new
details
about
Trump’s
lack of
concern
about
the
Capitol
riot and
his push
to
reverse
his loss
even as
advisers
repeatedly
told him
Joe
Biden
had
legitimately
won.
And on
Thursday,
Vice
President
Kamala
Harris
made a
campaign
appearance
in the
battleground
state of
Wisconsin
with Liz
Cheney,
the
former
Republican
congresswoman
who lost
her seat
largely
because
of her
condemnation
of
Trump’s
actions
inciting
the riot
on Jan.
6, 2021.
The
injection
of the
drama of
2020
into
this
year’s
presidential
election
could
mobilize
supporters
on
either
side of
the
race.
Trump
quickly
condemned
Smith’s
latest
court
filing
on
social
media as
an
attempt
to
“INTERFERE
IN THE
2024
PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTION”
and
portrayed
himself
as a
victim
of an
out-of-control
federal
prosecution.
He
returned
to the
question
of the
2020
vote at
a
Michigan
rally.
“We won,
we won,”
Trump
told
supporters
on
Thursday,
repeating
his
long-standing
baseless
claim.
“It was
a rigged
election.”
But
Harris
also
appears
eager to
talk
about
2020,
calculating
that
reminding
the
public
of the
details
of
Trump’s
post-election
behavior
is
helpful
to
people
for whom
the
memories
have
faded.
Her
Thursday
rally in
Ripon,
Wis. —
known as
the
birthplace
of the
GOP —
featured
Cheney
giving a
detailed
account
of
Trump’s
failure
to stop
the
attack
on the
Capitol,
which
was
intended
to
thwart
the
counting
of
electoral
votes
that
would
cement
his
loss.
Trump
“attempted
to stay
in power
by
unraveling
the
foundations
of our
republic,”
said
Cheney,
daughter
of
former
vice
president
Dick
Cheney,
who
emphasized
that she
had
never
before
voted
for a
Democrat.
“We
cannot
turn
away
from
this
truth.”
Cheney
is the
latest
of a
long
list of
Republican
supporters
that the
Democratic
nominee
has
touted
for
their
insistence
that
Jan. 6
made
Trump
unfit to
be
president
again.
And it
was
Harris’s
running
mate,
Minnesota
Gov. Tim
Walz,
who
elicited
Vance’s
non-answer
on
Tuesday
about
whether
Trump
lost in
2020 in
one of
the most
combative
moments
of the
vice-presidential
debate.
What’s
not
clear is
whether
any of
it will
make a
difference
in a
competitive
election
in which
most
voters
have
already
decided
who they
will
vote
for,
with
only a
sliver
of
undecided
voters
in
roughly
a
half-dozen
battleground
states
likely
to
decide
the
outcome.
Democrats
won
statewide
races in
those
battlegrounds
in 2022
on a
pledge
to
defend
democracy,
and
Harris
has in
her
favor
the fact
that
most
voters
believe
that
Biden
won in
2020
fairly.
Reminding
voters
of how
Trump
incited
violence
to block
that
victory
could
sway at
least
some of
them.
Polls
show
that a
majority
of
Republicans
—
roughly
two-thirds
—
believe
Biden
stole
the 2020
election.
The
result
is
different
among
Democrats
and,
crucially,
independents,
however.
The
Washington
Post
published
a
Pennsylvania
poll
last
month
that
found 55
percent
of
registered
voters
thought
Biden
won the
2020
election
fair and
square,
while 35
percent
thought
he won
due to
voter
fraud
and 10
percent
had no
opinion.
Registered
voters
were
split on
which
candidate
would do
a better
job
“protecting
American
democracy,”
with 48
percent
choosing
Harris
and 45
percent
Trump.
Nearly 7
in 10
voters
said the
issue
was
extremely
important
in their
vote,
topping
any
other
issue.
The Post
asked
the same
questions
in North
Carolina,
with
similar
results.
Trump
and his
Republican
allies,
meanwhile,
have
argued
without
evidence
that
fraud
will
taint
this
year’s
election,
too — a
clear
signal
that the
former
president
is
unlikely
to
accept
defeat
quietly
if he
loses
again.
Trump
has told
Republican
National
Committee
Chairman
Michael
Whatley
it is
Whatley’s
job to
have the
structure
in place
to be
able to
challenge
results.
“I can
get out
the
vote,”
Trump
has said
privately,
according
to
people
who have
heard
the
comments.
“You
need to
protect
the
vote.”
Republicans
have
already
taken
extensive
steps to
lay the
groundwork
for
potential
challenges
to the
results.
Their
primary
strategy
has been
to
claim,
without
evidence,
that
massive
numbers
of
noncitizens
are
registered
to vote
and will
cast
ballots
in the
November
election.
They
have
filed
multiple
lawsuits
demanding
that
state
and
local
election
officials
scour
their
rolls
for
ineligible
registrations
— all of
it with
the
potential
to form
the
basis of
election
challenges
should
Trump
lose.
Research
has
shown
that
noncitizen
voting
is
extremely
rare.
The RNC
has
spent
considerable
time and
resources
in
recent
months
buying
software
and
examining
state
voter
rolls,
hoping
to find
people
who are
registered
in more
than one
state,
according
to
people
familiar
with the
work.
That
work has
given
them a
list of
ballots
they
plan to
challenge
after
the
election,
the
people
said.
The GOP
has also
sought
to make
it
easier
for
local
election
officials
to
question
results
in the
event of
irregularities.
In
Georgia,
a
pro-Trump
majority
on the
State
Election
Board
passed a
rule
this
summer
allowing
for
local
investigations
in the
immediate
days
after
Election
Day.
Critics
believe
the
change
is
intended
to allow
local
officials
to delay
or
refuse
to
certify
results.
Democrats
have
filed a
lawsuit
seeking
to block
the
rule.
The RNC
has
claimed
to have
hired
more
than
100,000
observers
across
the
nation
to
monitor
polling
and
counting
locations
on
Election
Day. The
monitors,
the
party
says,
will be
trained
to
challenge
suspicious
activities
and keep
extensive
logs of
any
irregularities
they see
—
another
potential
foundation
for
post-election
legal
action.
Trump
campaign
advisers
have
urged
Trump to
talk
less
about
2020.
Arguing
the
election
was
stolen
and that
the Jan.
6
criminal
defendants
deserve
pardons,
they
say, is
not a
winning
general
election
issue.
His
lawyers
sought
to block
the
Smith
filing
from
coming
out,
believing
it was
potentially
damaging
to him
one
month
before
the
election.
“Does it
force
him to
be
talking
about
things
once
again
they
don’t
want to
be
talking
about?
Yeah it
does,”
said
Marc
Short,
who
served
as chief
of staff
to
former
vice
president
Mike
Pence.
“It’s
one more
day
you’re
not
talking
about
the
border
or
inflation.”
Short
added,
however,
that
while
he’s
certain
Trump
won’t
accept a
defeat,
he is
less
convinced
that
events
will
unfold
the same
way
should
Trump
challenge
the
results.
“He’ll
say the
same
things
this
time if
he
loses,
but I
really
don’t
think
you’ll
have the
same
response,”
Short
said.
“The
conditions
are just
not the
same as
they
were in
2020,
where
people
were
pissed
off
after
covid
and the
[Black
Lives
Matter]
riots
and were
cooped
up. Do
you
think
the
Biden
Department
of the
Interior
is going
to
approve
a rally
for
Trump on
the
Ellipse
on Jan.
6?”
For many
Republicans
who have
endorsed
Harris,
Jan. 6
was a
turning
point,
allowing
them to
look
past
strong
policy
disagreements
with
Democrats.
In
Cheney’s
case,
Trump’s
campaign
has been
eager to
highlight
how she
repeatedly
criticized
Harris
as
“radical”
during
the 2020
presidential
race.
But the
Harris
campaign
believes
that
only
proves
the
point
that
Jan. 6 —
and the
broader
issue of
democracy
—
scrambled
traditional
partisan
alliances.
“It’s
country
over
party,
but
these
dweebs
wouldn’t
get it,”
a Harris
spokesperson,
Ammar
Moussa,
said
Thursday
in
response
to
recirculated
clips of
Cheney
attacking
Harris
four
years
ago.
Some of
the
Republicans
who have
backed
Harris
do not
plan to
support
Democrats
after
Trump is
gone —
and have
suggested
as much
publicly.
Former
Georgia
lieutenant
governor
Geoff
Duncan
said
during a
Republicans
for
Harris
gathering
in
August
that he
was
backing
Harris
to
“create
an
opportunity
for us
to have
four
years to
heal and
rebuild”
the GOP.
Short
said
election
denialism
could be
the
thing
that
defeats
Trump in
the end.
“Every
issue
set is
in our
favor,
from
inflation
to
border
security
to the
war in
the
Middle
East,
and the
fact
that
he’s
stayed
roughly
at 45 or
46
percent
the
entire
time
shows
that
people
have
formed
their
opinions
about
him,”
Short
said.
“We
should
be in a
landslide.
It feels
similar
to 2022
when
every
issue
was at
our
back,
but
people
weren’t
going to
vote for
election
deniers.”
Patrick
Svitek
in
Ripon,
Wis.,
Mariana
Alfaro
and
Scott
Clement
contributed
to this
report.
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