We’re still in the silly season and the times are getting dangerous. Barrel -time for Mark Meadows and what now appears as a clear timeline to reverse electoral results and foment a coup.
Former White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, was directly involved at major intersections of President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. What follows is a detailed timeline of all the publicly available information.
The timeline shows why Meadows may face significant criminal exposure for directly participating in a scheme to pressure the Justice Department to investigate baseless election fraud claims. The timeline also describes a “parallel track” reportedly created by Meadows and Rudy Giuliani, and Meadows’ repeated involvement in Donald Trump and the Trump campaign’s political efforts.
The House Committee on Oversight and Reform sent Meadows a request to appear for a transcribed interview several weeks ago. The evidence below raises, among other questions,
- whether Congress should coordinate with the Justice Department so as not to tread on any potential criminal investigation,
- whether the House and Senate committees investigating these matters should make a criminal referral to the Justice Department in the course of their oversight work, and
- why there is no indication that the Justice Department has started such a criminal investigation on its own initiative.
Notably, Meadows would have more difficulty resisting a subpoena to appear before a grand jury than he would a request or subpoena to appear before Congress. Also significant, Meadows may have greater legal exposure than others involved because he presumably understood well when Attorney General William Barr and others informed him that the allegations of widespread election fraud were without any foundation.
Nine highlights from the Timeline below:
1. Meadows and Giuliani created a “parallel track” to raise election fraud claims
2. Trump campaign staff followed up on “Meadows’ theory” that tens of thousands of “illegal aliens” voted in Arizona
3. Meadows introduced President Trump to DOJ official Jeffrey Clark, who was plotting to oust the acting attorney general and use the Justice Department to overturn election results in Georgia
4. Meadows expressed upset, along with Trump, in response to Attorney General Barr’s having told the Associated Press there was no election fraud that could have affected the outcome in the election
5. Meadows made a surprise visit to Georgia where he met with the Secretary of State’s lead elections investigator. Trump called her the next day on Meadow’s suggestion and in the call urged her to find fraud in Fulton County
6. Meadows arranged and participated in the call in which Trump asked Georgia Secretary of State Raffensperger to “find 11,780 votes”; and during the call Meadows asked the Georgia officials to share voting data even after they told him they could not because it was protected by law
7. In several communications with the Justice Department—in violation of White House and DOJ contacts policies—Meadows pressured the Department to investigate baseless allegations of election fraud
8. Then-Acting Secretary of Defense’s chief of staff Kash Patel says he spoke to Meadows “nonstop” on Jan. 6
9. In his final days in office, Trump hoped to issue a preemptive pardon for Meadows, Giuliani and possibly himself.
www.justsecurity.org/...
And on politicizing vaccination violence, the GOP is about homicidal sociopathy. Because apparently irony has a delta as well.
Alexander Vindman, who was fired by Trump for blowing the whistle on his Ukrainian phone call, leaves the door open to the possibility of running for office in order to combat “leaders who have violated their oath.”