As President Donald Trump continues his vain attempt to overturn his election defeat, Republicans who refuse to go along are being hit with a coordinated campaign of intimidation, retaliation and threats. That’s what fired Trump appointee Chris Krebs alleged in his recent lawsuit.
The relationship of Trump’s campaign, Newsmax, and diGenova, Krebs writes, is “symbiotic.”
In the suit filed against the Trump campaign, Krebs argues that the attacks are part of an intentional plan to bully any Republicans who question Trump’s claims that the election was rigged or who resist his campaign to nullify the election.
In the end, Krebs may not win. But his lawsuit is a graphic warning about the danger of political violence and how it’s already deforming Republican politics.
As Trump keeps pushing efforts to overturn the election, he and his allies have only escalated their rhetoric. On Wednesday, Trump tweeted, “We will soon be learning about the word ‘courage’, and saving our Country.”
We will soon be learning about the word “courage”, and saving our Country. I received hundreds of thousands of legal votes more, in all of the Swing States, than did my opponent. ALL Data taken after the vote says that it was impossible for me to lose, unless FIXED!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 9, 2020
It’s not clear whether the tweet is meant to incite violence — but if the goal is intimidation, it may be succeeding. Only a handful of Republican officials have pushed back against Trump’s baseless charges. The Republican attorneys general of 17 states are backing Texas’ long-shot bid to have the Supreme Court nullify the election results in Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Georgia. Another 106 Republican members of the House of Representatives signed onto an amicus brief backing Texas’ attempt to overturn the election.
If other members of the GOP are appalled by the president’s attempt at mass disenfranchisement, most of them aren’t saying so. Krebs thinks he knows why.
Until recently, Krebs was the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, putting him in charge of ensuring the security of the election and countering cyberattacks and disinformation.
After the vote, he and other officials vouched for the safety and integrity of the process, issuing a statement declaring that the vote “was the most secure in American history” and that, contrary to the false rumors then circulating, there was “no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised.”
Upset that Krebs challenged his narrative of fraud, Trump fired him via tweet, making him an immediate target of TrumpWorld. During an appearance on Newsmax, Trump ally Joseph diGenova singled out Krebs and called for him to be “drawn and quartered” and “taken out at dawn and shot.”
In his case against the Trump campaign, Newsmax and diGenova, Krebs alleges defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, aiding and abetting, and civil conspiracy.
As a result of diGenova’s threat, Krebs argues in the suit, “an angry mob immediately bombarded” him “with a barrage of death threats and harassment, which continue to this day.”
But, Krebs notes, his isn’t an isolated case. He alleges that Trump and his media allies have launched a concerted campaign “to discredit and defame dissenting Republicans by labeling them as ‘traitors,’ ‘cowards,’ ‘liars,’ or similar terms to retaliate against them directly, and to chill others from speaking out.”
Krebs contends that the threats are central to the campaign to deter Republicans from breaking with Trump, even as he “stoked fear, hawked conspiracy theories, and essentially claimed a vast criminal conspiracy.”
If other members of the GOP are appalled by the president’s attempt at mass disenfranchisement, most of them aren’t saying so.
That dynamic has played out around the country. In Pennsylvania, Trump and his allies have attacked Republicans as “cowards” and “traitors.” In Arizona, Trump alleged that Gov. Doug Ducey had “betrayed the people of Arizona” because he followed the law and certified the state’s election results. In Georgia, Trump attacked the governor and labeled Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger an “enemy of the people” because he hadn’t “bowed to Trump’s demands that the Georgia election results be thrown out so that he could be declared the winner in the state.”
But the most dramatic aspect of Krebs’ lawsuit is his allegation that Trump is actively and intentionally fomenting violence.









