Former President Donald Trump has never been good at keeping secrets. It’s a trait that’s vexed both his closest advisers and the U.S. military when he has appeared at times physically unable to prevent himself from spewing out his plans like a clichéd serial villain.
The latest examples came last weekend. First, NBC News reported, Trump told the assembled crowd at a campaign-style rally that he was firmly on the side of the Jan. 6 rioters:
“Another thing we’ll do, and so many people have been asking me about it, if I run and if I win, we will treat those people from January 6 fairly,” Trump said during a rally in Conroe, Texas. “And if it requires pardons, we will give them pardons because they are being treated so unfairly.”
This isn’t new behavior for Trump, whose abuse of the pardon power toward the end of his term should have warranted an impeachment inquiry. It also fits in with the pattern that special counsel Robert Mueller noted during the Russia investigation. While stopping short of charging the president with obstructing justice, Mueller noted several instances in which the promise of a pardon appeared to compel witnesses to withhold testimony from investigators.
There’s not much, in the immediate term, for the rioters who took part in the attack on the Capitol to gain from this promise from Trump. Given the average sentence we’re seeing so far, most of them will have served their time by the time Trump could conceivably have the power to make good on his offer. But it would still clear the federal convictions from their records, cutting short any potential terms of parole, as well. That’s a pretty substantial incentive for any recidivism on their parts.
Moreover, the promise that political violence will be forgiven is a dangerous green light for his loyalists to use whatever methods they see fit to get Trump back into the White House. This goes beyond his pledge to pay the legal fees for followers who attacked protesters at his rallies in 2016. Instead, he’s offering up the equivalent of a “get out of jail free” card to his backers in any future insurrection.
He also telegraphed his concerns about the investigations of him in New York and Georgia. In the former, his personal businesses are being examined for potential fraud. In the latter, a special grand jury has been impaneled to look into whether his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in the state broke any state criminal laws.
“If these radical, vicious, racist prosecutors do anything wrong or illegal, I hope we are going to have in this country the biggest protest we have ever had in Washington, D.C., in New York, in Atlanta and elsewhere, because our country and our elections are corrupt,” Trump declared. Taken in tandem, the two statements are a blatant call to arms to his faithful should the state move against his crimes. In other words, any practice of the rule of law from this group of Black prosecutors should, in Trump’s eyes, be met with the rule of arms.
If that weren’t enough, the next day Trump issued one of his tweets-in-disguise press releases, railing against the potential reform of the Electoral Count Act that Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, is spearheading. In doing so, Trump spelled out more clearly than ever before what he wanted from former Vice President Mike Pence when the electoral votes were counted on Jan. 6:








