Former President Donald Trump is all but certain to run for president again. And he’s sending increasingly clear signals that he’d like to form another Jan. 6-style mob to help him secure the White House.
In a Thursday interview with right-wing radio host Wendy Bell, Trump alleged that he’s now offering a growing suite of services for Jan. 6 defendants: financial support, and — if he makes it back into the White House — pardons and formal government apologies.
“I am financially supporting people that are incredible and they were in my office actually two days ago, so they’re very much in my mind,” Trump said during the interview. “It’s a disgrace what they’ve done to them.” He also claimed that “if I win, I will be looking very, very strongly about pardons, full pardons.” That could mean trying to spring Jan. 6 rioters who are in prison if he were to become president.
It could be argued Trump is effectively setting the stage for a kind of pro-Trump paramilitary force.
Is Trump actually financially supporting Jan. 6 defendants? There’s good reason to be skeptical. As The Washington Post notes, Trump won’t even help pay the legal fees of his blindly loyal attack dog, Rudy Giuliani. And before scamming people as president, Trump scammed people who put their trust in him to teach them about real estate or to oversee funds for charity.
Less important than his follow-through, however, is the fact that Trump is sending out a signal — one which his most devoted supporters will surely take note of. Trump is not only continuing to defend the transgressions of Jan. 6, but also intensifying his commitment to take care of its perpetrators should he achieve presidential power again. Implicit in these pledges is another one: that he will look to take care of anyone who helps him next time around.









