Trump pressure on U.S. Justice Department to be focus of Jan. 6 hearing
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[June 23, 2022]
By Richard Cowan and Moira Warburton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Donald Trump's
failed efforts to pressure Justice Department officials to overturn his
2020 election defeat will be the topic of Thursday's U.S. congressional
hearing investigating his supporters' Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S.
Capitol.
The hearing, set to begin at 3 p.m. EDT (1900 GMT), will take the public
into the White House on Jan. 3, 2021, when there was a discussion of
then-President Trump possibly firing Acting Attorney General Jeffrey
Rosen and replacing him with Jeffrey Clark, a fervent Trump supporter.
Rosen is scheduled to testify before the U.S. House of Representatives
select committee along with Richard Donoghue, former acting deputy
attorney general, and former Assistant Attorney General for the Office
of Legal Counsel Steven Engel.
Justice Department officials, according to committee aides, also were
asked to take steps to encourage some states, such as Arizona and
Georgia, to engineer Trump victories over Democrat Joe Biden even though
Biden was the winner in those contests.
Thursday's hearing, the fifth this month, will look into how Trump in
the waning days of his presidency, "was using the Department of Justice
for his own personal needs" to stay in power beyond Jan. 20, 2021, a
committee aide said.
For more than a year, the panel has been investigating the role Trump
and his associates played in events leading up to the Jan. 6 attack on
the Capitol where Congress was due to formally certify Biden's victory.
In a fiery speech outside the White House that day, Trump spoke of a
need to overturn his election defeat. His angry supporters fought their
way into the Capitol, injured scores of police officers and sent
lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence running for their lives.
Four people died the day of the attack, one fatally shot by police and
the others of natural causes. Some 140 police officers were injured, and
one who fought rioters died the next day. Four officers later died by
suicide.
Nearly 850 people have been arrested for crimes related to the riot,
including more than 250 charged with assaulting or impeding law
enforcement.
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Former US President Donald Trump displayed on a screen during a
hearing of the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th
Attack on the US Capitol in Washington, DC, U.S. June 21, 2022. Al
Drago/Pool via REUTERS
Trump has blamed his defeat on widespread fraud,
although dozens of courts, state election officials and members of
Trump's own administration have rejected his claims, and multiple
witnesses testified they told Trump as much.
Trump has repeatedly hinted he may run for president again in 2024.
Thursday's hearing, like previous ones, is expected
to feature both live and videotaped testimony from former officials
and associates of the Republican former president.
They will testify, according to aides, that pressure was placed on
Justice Department officials to publicly state that there was
election fraud and that they were urged to either file lawsuits for,
or along with, the Trump re-election campaign challenging the
election outcome.
The hearing will highlight how a few senior Republican officials at
the Justice Department resisted the Trump-led pressure campaign.
Testimony is expected to show that Clark had drafted a letter, never
sent, to Georgia state lawmakers shortly after the 2020 election
that falsely claimed the department had found concerns that may have
influenced the election outcome there and elsewhere.
The letter urged state legislators to convene a special session to
overturn the election results there, but Rosen and Donoghue refused
to send it.
Clark has said little publicly about his actions during the final
weeks of Trump's presidency. On Twitter earlier this year, he called
himself "one of the top targets of the politically motivated J6
committee."
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Moira Warburton; Editing by Scott
Malone and Howard Goller)
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