I think it’s safe to say that Steve Bannon thinks of himself as a very clever person. The former White House adviser and Breitbart executive chairman has been throwing bombs and dodging consequences fairly successfully for years now.
So how, then, to respond to Bannon’s offer over the weekend to finally testify before the House Jan. 6 committee after refusing to cooperate? Answer: with a grain of salt big enough to coat a lifetime supply of pretzels, my friends.
Let’s take a close look at the letter Bannon’s lawyer sent to committee Chair Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., which was first reported by The Guardian. “Mr. Bannon has not had a change of posture or of heart,” Robert Costello wrote. Former President Donald Trump had invoked executive privilege in October, he explained, preventing his client from providing the testimony and documents that the committee had subpoenaed.
Why would Trump, after spending years arguing for a nearly despotic view of executive power, yield on this front?
Now, things have changed: Trump has provided a letter informing Bannon that Trump will “waive Executive Privilege for you, which allows you to go in and testify truthfully and fairly, as per the request of the Unselect Committee of political Thugs and Hacks, who have allowed no Due Process, no Cross-Examination, and no real Republican members or witnesses to be present or interviewed.” Costello explained that this now means Bannon “is willing to, and indeed prefers, to testify at your public hearing.”
There’s clearly a lot to unpack there, not least the former president’s ever-loose grasp on the niceties of the English language. The biggest surface-level takeaway is that if Trump was the reason Bannon couldn’t testify before, he is now willing to stand aside and allow Bannon’s testimony — ideally publicly. But that begs the question: Why would Trump, after spending years arguing for a nearly despotic view of executive power, yield on this front?
None of the answers make Bannon’s offer appealing.
First, Trump is reportedly tired of seeing the Jan. 6 hearings proceed without his cronies being able to defend him. Instead, we’ve had a tightly run production that doesn’t pretend to be a trial and hasn’t been plagued with a series of non sequiturs and distractions that Republicans offered during the impeachment proceedings. In offering up Bannon specifically for a public hearing, the hope is clearly that he’ll inject some nonsense into the proceedings that will make Trump happy. (Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., a committee member, dismissed that idea Sunday, noting that Bannon would initially testify behind closed doors like every other witness so far.)
Second, Bannon has been charged with contempt of Congress — and his trial is scheduled to begin in one week. A federal grand jury indicted him last year, noting that he had refused to appear before Congress or turn over documents. That makes it awfully convenient that Trump would now allow Bannon to testify, something that could potentially make him seem more reasonable in the eyes of a jury.








