[Yesterday],
the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack
on the U.S. Capitol held its fourth public hearing. The agenda was to lay out
the scheme to pressure swing state electors to switch their states’ votes to
Trump and then, when that failed, to get state operatives to create a false
slate of electors to submit to Congress and the National Archives to set up an
argument that there was confusion about who had won.
That,
Trump’s operatives hoped, would give then–Vice President Mike Pence an excuse
either to refuse to count Biden votes on the grounds that there was confusion
over which slate was legitimate (there was no confusion: the Biden votes were certified, and the Trump votes were not), or to send the certified electoral
votes back to the state legislatures, where Republican-dominated bodies could
recertify for Trump.
The scheme was illegal across the board.
It failed, committee chair Bennie Thompson (D-MS) pointed out, because the
system held. But that system has been under attack by Trump supporters for the
past year and a half, and it is no longer clear that it will continue to hold.
As proof, Thompson offered the case of the New Mexico panel that refused to
certify the results of the recent election there. While two of the three panel
members finally agreed to certify the results after pressure the state courts
demanded they do so, one continued to refuse, citing “his gut feeling” that the
results were wrong. That man was at the January 6th attack
on the Capitol.
The theme of the day was our election systems, and how Trump’s attack on them
continues to threaten our democracy. The panel laid out how Trump and his
people tried to get state legislators to throw out Biden votes and certify
electoral votes for Trump, calling the lawmakers, inviting them to the White
House, and, finally, threatening them over social media and sending protesters
to their homes.
When
that didn’t work, they urged pro-Trump state politicians to produce
alternative, false, slates of electors, promising that those slates would be
used only if courts ruled the certified votes illegitimate. That promise,
though, was a lie. Trump’s team planned to use the existence of two sets of
electoral votes to justify throwing out both, thereby getting rid of legitimate
Biden electors and giving the election to Trump.
The committee’s first panel included officials who had borne pressure from the
Trump camp: Russell “Rusty” Bowers, the speaker of the Arizona House of
Representatives; Brad Raffensperger, Georgia’s secretary of state; and Gabriel
Sterling, the chief operating officer in the office of the Georgia secretary of
state, responsible for overseeing elections.
All three are Republicans, at least two of whom supported Trump in the election
but refused to do his illegal bidding after it. Once again, the committee told
its story using only Republican testimony, making it hard for opponents to
argue that the hearings are a political hit job. Schiff made a point of asking
Bowers about his admiration for President Ronald Reagan, and Bowers talked
about Reagan’s celebration of the orderly transfer of power in the United
States, a tradition that Trump, of course, shattered. The three men detailed
pressure from Trump lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis, from lawyer John
Eastman, from Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows, and from Trump himself.
Bowers outlined weeks of pressure to produce a competing set of electors or to
decertify the existing ones, even as Giuliani and Ellis refused to produce any
evidence to back up their wild claims. Bowers refused to go along. Today, he testified
passionately about the importance of his oath to the Constitution and his duty
to the state of Arizona, and how Trump and his people were asking him to break
an oath to a document he considers divinely inspired for the benefit of one
man. Giuliani tried to convince him that, as Republicans, they should stick
together to put their man back into the White House.
It wasn’t going to happen. Bowers wrote in his diary: “It is painful to have
friends…turn on me with such rancor.” But “I do not want to be a winner by
cheating. I will not play with laws I swore allegiance to.”
Raffensperger explained that the claims of fake “suitcases” of ballots in
Georgia and other irregularities were false, that the election was “remarkably
smooth,” and that two recounts produced the same results as the original
counting of the votes. He talked of pressure from the Trump camp over its
election lies. Representative Adam Schiff (D-CA), who was directing the
proceedings today, noted that Meadows
reached out 18 times to set up a phone call between Raffensperger and
then-president Trump.
Once underway, the call took an extraordinary 67 minutes, as Trump repeatedly
pushed Raffensperger to “find” 11,780 votes, one more than Biden had won in the
state. Trump told Raffensperger that it was “very dangerous” for him to say
there was no fraud, a suggestion Raffensperger interpreted as a threat. “Why
wouldn’t you want to find the right answer, Brad?” Trump demanded.
Sterling walked us through the “suitcases” allegation again, but his testimony
focused on his anger at the disinformation coming from the Trump campaign and
then-president Trump himself. He asked Trump directly, on camera, to stop
inciting violence. “It’s not right,” he said. Rather than backing off, Trump
escalated his pressure on Georgia, alleging “massive voter fraud” there.
The witnesses told the committee that Trump had tried to pressure them by
whipping up his followers to harass them at home, terrifying them and their
families. Bowers said he is still harassed every week, with people staking out
his home and calling him a pedophile and a pervert. Raffensperger detailed the
threats coming to him and his wife and said that people broke into his widowed
daughter-in-law’s home.
The threats provided the introduction to the next witness, who sat before the
committee alone. After Thompson dismissed the first panel, the committee swore
in Wandrea ArShaye “Shaye” Moss. Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman, were the
two Georgia election workers Trump and Giuliani targeted as rigging the vote.
If Bowers represented the heights of political lawmaking, and Raffensperger and
Sterling the bureaucracy of it, Moss and her mother, who was sitting behind
her, represented the rest of us.
But Moss was not at all ordinary. She gave a passionate account of why she had
chosen to become an election worker and how she had loved helping older
people—people who had not been able to vote when they were young—submit their
ballots. On the anniversary of the 1964 murder of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman,
and Michael Schwerner for their efforts to register Black voters in
Mississippi, Ms. Moss articulated just what the struggle for voting rights
continues to mean.
Her testimony also outlined what that struggle continues to cost. Both she and
her mother explained how they and Moss’s grandmother had been doxed and
harassed until they are now virtual prisoners in their homes—when they can be
in them at all. The FBI warned Ms. Freeman to leave her home for two months
around the time of January 6 because
agents worried for her safety.
“Do you know how it feels to have the president of the United States target
you?” Freeman said on video. “The President of the United States is supposed to
represent every American. Not target one. But he targeted me: Lady Ruby, a
small business owner, a mother, a proud American citizen, who stood up to help
Fulton County run an election in the middle of the pandemic."
Taken together, today’s testimony showed
the human side of the rule of law in the United States, and how Trump’s
pressure on officials and weaponization of gangs to harass them threatens to
destroy the system. Both Moss and Freeman have had to quit their jobs, along
with all the permanent workers in the Georgia counting venue Trump and Giuliani
attacked.
The committee revealed some other interesting information today. It said that
protests at state houses, organized by Trump people, had some of the same
characters who later showed up in Washington on January
6, including Jacob Chansley (the “QAnon Shaman” who showed up on January 6 in an
animal headdress) and various Proud Boys.
It showed testimony from Ronna McDaniel, the head of the Republican National
Committee, confirming that the RNC helped the Trump campaign collect the false
electoral slates. It named two lawmakers who appeared to participate in the
attempt to overthrow the election. Representative Andy Biggs (R-AZ) apparently
called Bowers to pressure him, and Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) wanted to hand
the fake slates of electors from Michigan and Wisconsin to Pence on January 6.
Striding quickly past reporters today,
Johnson told CNN’s chief
congressional correspondent Manu Raju that he had “no idea” who asked him to
share the fake electors with Pence. He said he had “no involvement” in the
attempt to provide fake electors to overturn the legitimate outcome of the 2020
election and claimed he didn’t know who handed his office the envelope that was
supposed to go to Pence. It was, he said, “some staff intern” who handed
another staff member the envelope. When asked if he would try to find out, he
said, “No. No, because there’s no conspiracy here. This is a complete
non-story, guys. Complete non-story.”
—Heather
Cox Richardson
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