The newly revealed trove of text message exchanges reported to involve then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows is chock-full of damning — and embarrassing — moments.
On Monday, CNN reported that it had obtained more than 2,000 text messages received or sent by Meadows between Election Day 2020 and President Joe Biden’s inauguration on Jan. 20, 2021.
News of the messages don’t do former President Donald Trump or any of his loyalists any favors.
Texts reportedly sent from then-Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller appear to completely undermine Trump’s election fraud lies. They do an equally good job of exposing the right-wing attempt to deflect blame from Trump for the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
It’s worth noting that NBC News hasn’t independently verified all of the text messages. NBC News reached out to those who allegedly sent or received texts and hasn’t received responses from most of them.
Members of the House Jan. 6 committee have previously alleged that Trump was made aware he’d lost the election fairly, but the texts reportedly from Miller shine more light on the specific details Trump and many in his circle refused to accept.
Days after the election, according to CNN, Miller sent a text carefully detailing how Trump lost in Pennsylvania, a state the former president still falsely claims to have won:
One other key data point: In 2016, POTUS received 15.5% of the vote in Philadelphia County. Today he is currently at 18.3%. So he increased from his performance in 2016. In 2016, Philadelphia County made up 11.3% of the total vote in the state. As it currently stands, Philadelphia County only makes up 10.2% of the statewide vote tally. So POTUS performed better in a smaller share. Sen. Santorum was just making this point on CNN — cuts hard against the urban vote stealing narrative.
Miller texted Meadows a week later saying he hadn’t found evidence of a George Soros-backed election conspiracy, CNN reported. Conservatives frequently try to paint Soros, a billionaire Democratic donor, as an ominous political figure — and they frequently use antisemitic tropes to do it. But Miller told Meadows there was “not much there on Dem/Soros conspiracy connections.”
“Will defer to you on whether or not to share full report with POTUS,” Miller reportedly texted. “POTUS is clearly hyped up on them, not just from his tweets, but he also called me and Justin separately last night to complain.”








