The main focus of the House Jan. 6 committee’s first two public hearings has been clear: proving then-President Donald Trump was responsible for the Capitol riot by showing he knowingly lied about so-called fraud in the 2020 election.
The audacity of Trump’s “big lie” has become clearer as we’ve learned more about what his staffers were telling him in private — that he was, justly, an election loser. And those lies could cripple Trump financially.
The committee has shared testimony from a slew of figures in Trump’s world — including former Attorney General William Barr and former campaign aide Jason Miller — who all said they and others told Trump and senior White House officials that he’d lost the election fairly.
On Monday, the committee played footage of Barr testifying that Trump claimed that there was major fraud underway “before there was any potential of looking at evidence.” It used that footage, along with testimony from former Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, to show that members of Trump’s inner circle gave him information that undermined a key conspiracy theory he spread after the election: that mysterious “dumps” of fraudulent votes were used to defeat him.
Barr and Stepien in their depositions both acknowledged that everyone understood the early election night returns would be positive for Trump but the situation would change as mail votes were tallied pic.twitter.com/yfWhwEkypN
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 13, 2022
The committee also replayed footage it debuted last week, of Barr telling congressional investigators that he “made it clear” to Trump that he “did not agree with the idea of saying the election was stolen and putting out this stuff — which I told the president was bullshit.”
Thompson plays a clip of Bill Barr's interview with the January 6 committee where Barr describes Trump's big lie as "bullshit" pic.twitter.com/cL7StPySxU
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 10, 2022
In footage released Thursday, Miller testified a Trump campaign data strategist “delivered to the president in pretty blunt terms that he was going to lose” a few days after the 2020 election. That news was based on empirical data, Miller said.
We’ve seen mountains of evidence — with more likely to come — that Trump simply refused to accept the reality of his election loss and took drastic steps to alter it. That, as the committee has laid out, included weaponizing a violent mob to stop the vice president from certifying the electoral college votes. I firmly believe all of this may be grounds for criminal charges, but the evidence could shore up civil cases against Trump, as well.








