| Yesterday’s testimony before the House Select
  Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol
  was explosive. It tied former president Donald Trump and his chief of staff
  Mark Meadows directly to a plot to overturn the U.S. government.
 The witness was Cassidy Hutchinson, a 25-year-old aide to Meadows and
  congressional liaison who was well known on Capitol Hill. She was a staunch
  Republican who had worked for Representative Steve Scalise (R-LA), the second
  highest Republican in the House, and Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX). An aide to
  former House speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI), Brendan Buck, tweeted that “when
  Meadows was on the Hill he always insisted that she be in *every* meeting he
  had, no matter how small. It was odd then, and doesn't seem to be working out
  for him now.”
 
 Hutchinson testified that leaders in the Trump White House planned the attack
  on the Capitol. On January 2, 2021, Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani met with
  Meadows and others in the White House, and as Hutchinson walked him to his
  vehicle, Giuliani asked her if she was excited about the sixth, saying,
  “We’re going to the Capitol! It’s going to be great!” When she asked Meadows
  what Giuliani meant, Meadows told her, “There’s a lot going on…things might get
  real, real bad on January 6.”
 
 On January 4, National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien called Meadows to
  warn of violence on January 6. The Secret Service and White House Deputy
  Chief of Staff Anthony Ornato, who was in charge of security protocol to protect
  anyone covered by presidential protection, also warned of coming violence.
 
 Hutchinson connected Trump to the insurrection attempt when she noted that
  on January 5, Trump told Meadows to contact Trump confidants Roger Stone
  and Michael Flynn, both of whom Trump had recently pardoned after they had
  been convicted of crimes, to talk about the next day. Hutchinson says Meadows
  did that. At the time, Stone was in Washington, D.C., where he was repeatedly
  photographed with members of the Oath Keepers who were acting as his
  bodyguards. A number of Oath Keepers have been charged with seditious
  conspiracy; at least two have pleaded guilty.
 
 That night, Meadows wanted to go to the “War Room” that Giuliani, Trump
  lawyer John Eastman, and others had set up at the Willard Hotel, but he
  ultimately decided to call in rather than to go in person. According to
  Hutchinson, by about 8:00 on the morning of January 6, intelligence
  reports were already coming in that some of the people near the Ellipse,
  where Trump was to speak, were dressed in body armor and armed with
  Glock-style pistols, shotguns, and AR-15s, along with other weapons. At
  10:00, Hutchinson, Ornato, and Meadows talked of the weapons, but Meadows
  brushed it off, asking only if they had told Trump, which they had.
 
 That made Hutchinson’s next revelation seismic. Text messages between
  Hutchinson and Ornato show that Trump was “furious” before the Ellipse rally
  because he wanted photos to show the space full of people and it was not full
  because law enforcement was screening people for weapons before they could go
  in. Trump wanted the screening machines, called magnetometers, to be taken
  down. Hutchinson testified that Trump yelled, “They’re not here to hurt me.
  Take the F’ing mags away. Let my people in. They can march to the Capitol
  from here.”
 
 Then, knowing that some of the people in the crowd were armed, Trump
  repeatedly urged them to “fight,” using language his lawyers had warned
  against.
 
 Hutchinson testified that Trump was determined to go to the Capitol with the
  crowd despite the desperate efforts of White House Counsel Pat Cipollone to
  make sure it didn’t happen. Cipollone told Hutchinson that Trump’s appearance
  there would open the White House up to being charged with “every crime
  imaginable” because it would look like Trump was inciting a riot.
  Nonetheless, Trump was furious that Meadows had not been able to persuade the
  Secret Service to make it happen, so furious that Cassidy heard from others
  that when he found that the SUV in which he was riding would not take him to
  the Capitol, Trump had lunged at the agent refusing to take him there.
 
 Hutchinson did not know what the plan was for Trump’s trip to the Capitol,
  but there was talk of an additional speech there, “before he went in. I know
  that there was a conversation about him going into the House chamber at one
  point,” she said. The president is only supposed to go into the House chamber
  when specifically invited, so perhaps he expected to be invited in, or
  perhaps he was going in without an invitation, or perhaps those talking about
  it were just tossing out unworkable ideas.
 
 Back at the White House, as the rioters breached the Capitol, Hutchinson went
  into Meadows’s office between 2:00 and 2:05 to ask if he was watching the
  scene unfold on his television. Scrolling through his phone, he answered that
  he was. She asked if he had talked to Trump. He said, “Yeah. He wants to be
  alone right now.” Cipollone burst into the office and said to go get the
  president. Meadows repeated that Trump didn't want to do anything. Cipollone
  “very clearly said this to Mark—something to the effect of, ‘Mark, something
  needs to be done or people are going to die and the blood’s going to be on
  your f-ing hands. This is getting out of control.’”
 
 When the rioters began to chant, “Hang Mike Pence,” Cipollone tried again to
  get Trump to stop the rioters, and Meadows again said, “You heard it, Pat. He
  thinks Pence deserves it. He doesn’t think they’re doing anything wrong.”
  Then, rather than calming the crowd as it threatened the vice president, at
  2:24, Trump put out the tweet further blaming Pence for letting him down.
 
 By 3:00, White House personnel, Ivanka Trump, and various members of Congress
  were begging Trump to release a statement telling the rioters to go home,
  making it clear they all knew he could make the violence stop if only he
  wanted to. But he didn’t want to. Not until 4:17, after Biden had already
  made a statement, did he speak up. Trump told the rioters to go home and that
  “we love you.”
 
 The next day, as Cabinet officers talked of invoking the 25th Amendment to
  the Constitution and removing Trump from office, advisors convinced Trump to
  make a video. Even then, he refused to say that the rioters should be
  prosecuted—instead, he wanted to talk of pardoning them—and refused to say
  that the election was over. In the aftermath of the election, both Meadows
  and Giuliani asked for a presidential pardon.
 
 What emerged from today’s explosive hearing was the story of a president
  and his close advisors who planned a coup, sent an armed mob to the Capitol,
  approved of calls to murder the vice president, and had to be forced to call
  the mob off. Two of the president’s closest advisors then asked for a
  presidential pardon. While they did not get those pardons, Trump’s PAC later
  gave $1 million to Meadows’s Conservative Partnership Institute.
 
 That, right there, is enough to make today stunning. But there was
  more. Hutchinson described an angry and violent man who threw plates at the
  walls when he was frustrated. The committee revealed that when it interviewed
  Michael Flynn, he took the Fifth on whether violence on January 6th was
  justified either legally or morally. He also took the Fifth on whether he
  believed in the peaceful transition of power in the U.S.
 
 Vice-chair Liz Cheney (R-WY) revealed at the end of the hearing that
  witnesses said they had been pressured by Trump’s people to remain “loyal”
  when testifying, and having just tipped their hand about just how much
  information the committee has, Thompson urged those witnesses to come back
  and revise their testimony. He urged others to come forward as well—perhaps a
  nudge to Cipollone, who has been portrayed positively in the hearings,
  both today and in the hearing covering Trump’s attempt to install
  Jeffrey Clark as acting attorney general, when Cipollone stood against that
  corruption.
 
 CNN journalist Jake Tapper concluded: “It was devastating
  testimony, a portrait of a president who was completely and utterly out of
  control and, without question, knew of the danger of his supporters that were
  going to the mall…. This was obscene.”
 
 It was. And yet no one in the White House either spoke up to warn us
  before January 6 or testified at Trump’s second impeachment trial,
  where he was charged with incitement of insurrection and, thanks to
  Republican senators, acquitted.
 —Heather Cox Richardson Notes: https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2022/06/28/jan-6-committee-former-white-house-counsel-cipollone/7762146001/ https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/trump-gave-1m-meadows-nonprofit-weeks-after-jan-6-panel-n1288334 https://www.npr.org/2022/04/29/1095538077/a-second-oath-keeper-pleaded-guilty-to-seditious-conspiracy-in-the-jan-6-riot https://www.politifact.com/article/2022/jun/28/what-cassidy-hutchinsons-background/ https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/04/23/meadows-jan6-secret-service-committee-testimony/ https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/01/20/trump-secret-pardons-validity/... | 
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