Letters from an American - January 14, 2025
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January 14, 2025.
Shortly after midnight last night, the Justice Department released Special Counsel Jack Smith's final report on former President Donald Trump's attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. The 137-page report concludes that,
substantial evidence demonstrates that Mr. Trump
engaged in an unprecedented criminal effort
to overturn the legitimate results of the election
in order to retain power.
The report explains the case Smith and his team
compiled against Trump.
It outlines the ways in which evidence proved Trump broke laws, and it lays out the federal
interests served by prosecuting Trump.
It explains how the team investigated Trump, interviewing more than 250 people and obtaining
the testimony of more than 55 witnesses before a grand jury, and how Justice Department policy
governed that investigation.
It also explains how Trump's litigation and the US Supreme Court's surprising determination that Trump enjoyed immunity from prosecution for breaking laws as
part of his official duties, dramatically slowed the prosecution.
There is little in the part of the report covering Trump's behavior that was not
already public information. The report explains how Trump lied that he won the 2020 presidential election
and continued to lie even when his own appointees and employees told him he had lost. It lays out
how he pressured state officials to throw out votes for his opponent, then-President-elect Joe Biden, and how he
and his cronies recruited false electors in key states Trump lost to create slates of
false electoral votes.
It explains how Trump tried to force Justice Department officials to support his lie and
to trick states into rescinding their electoral votes for Biden, and how, finally, he pressured his Vice President,
Mike Pence, to either throw out votes for Biden or send state counts back to the states.
When Pence refused, correctly asserting that he had no such power, Trump urged his supporters
to attack the U.S. Capitol.
He refused to call them off for hours. Smith explained that the Justice Department concluded that Trump was guilty on four counts,
including conspiracy to defraud the United States by trying to interfere with or obstruct one of its lawful governmental functions by deceit, craft, or trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest, obstruction and conspiracy to obstruct by creating false evidence,
and conspiracy against rights by taking away people's right to vote for president.
The report explains why the Justice Department did not bring charges against Trump for insurrection,
noting that such cases are rare and definitions of insurrection are unclear,
raising concerns that such a charge rare and definitions of insurrection are unclear,
raising concerns that such a charge would endanger the larger case.
The report explained that prosecuting Trump served important national interests.
The government has an interest in the integrity of the country's process for collecting,
counting, and certifying presidential elections.
It cares about a peaceful and orderly transition of presidential power.
It cares that every citizen's vote is counted and about protecting public officials and
government workers from violence.
Finally, it cares about the fair and even-handed enforcement of the law.
While the report contained little new information,
what jumped out from its stark recitation
of the events of late 2020 and early 2021
was the power of Trump's lies.
There was no evidence that he won the 2020 election.
To the contrary, all evidence showed he lost it.
Even he didn't appear to believe he had won. And
yet, by the sheer power of repeating the lie that he had won and getting his
cronies to repeat it, along with embellishments that were also lies about
suitcases of ballots and thumb drives and voting machines and so on, he induced
his followers to try to overthrow a free and fair election
and install him in the presidency. He continued this disinformation after he
left office and then engaged in lawfare with both him and friendly witnesses
slowing down his cases by challenging subpoenas until there were no more
avenues to challenge them. And then the US Supreme Court stepped in.
The report calls out the extraordinary July 2024 decision of the US Supreme Court in Trump v.
United States, declaring that presidents cannot be prosecuted for official acts.
Before this case, the report reads,
for official acts. Before this case, the report reads, no court had ever found that presidents are immune
from criminal responsibility for their official acts, and no text in the Constitution explicitly
confers such criminal immunity on the president.
It continued, no president whose conduct was investigated, other than Mr. Trump, ever claimed absolute
criminal immunity for all official acts. The report quoted the dissent of Justice
Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Katanji Brown Jackson,
noting that the decision of the Republican-appointed justices effectively
creates a law-free zone around the president,
upsetting the status quo that has existed since the founding.
That observation hits hard today, as January 14th is officially Ratification Day, the anniversary
of the day in 1784 when members of the Confederation Congress ratified the Treaty of Paris that
ended the Revolutionary War and formally recognized the independence of the United States from
Great Britain.
The colonists had thrown off monarchy and determined to have a government of laws, not
of men.
But Trump threw off that bedrock principle with a lie. His success recalls how
Confederates who lost the Civil War resurrected their cause by claiming that the lenience of
General Ulysses S. Grant of the United States toward officers and soldiers who surrendered
at Appomattox Courthouse in April 1865 showed not the mercy of a victor, but rather an understanding
that the Confederates' defense of human slavery was superior to the ideas of those trying
to preserve the United States as a land based in the idea that all men were created equal.
When no punishment was forthcoming for those who had tried to destroy the United States, that story of Appomattox became the myth of the lost cause, defending the racial
hierarchies of the Old South and attacking the federal government that
tried to make opportunity and equal rights available for everyone. In
response to federal protection of black rights after 1948, when President Harry
Truman desegregated the U.S.
military, Confederate symbols and Confederate ideology began their return to the front of
American culture, where they fed the reactionary right. The myth of the lost cause and Trump's lie
came together in the rioters who carried the Confederate battle flag when they breached the
U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. Trump's nominee for Secretary of Defense, Fox News channel host
Pete Hegseth, is adamant about restoring the names of Confederate generals to U.S. military
installations. His confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee began today. The Defense Secretary oversees about 1.3 million
active-duty troops and another 1.4 million in the National Guard and
employed in reserves and civilian positions, as well as a budget of more
than 800 billion dollars. Hegseth has none of the usual qualifications of defense secretaries.
As Benjamin Wittes of Lawfare pointed out today, he has never held a policy role, never
run anything larger than a company of 200 soldiers, never been elected to anything.
Hegseth suggested his lack of qualifications was a strength, saying in his opening statement that while it is true that I don't have a similar biography to defense secretaries of the last 30 years, as President Trump told me, we've repeatedly placed people atop the Pentagon with supposedly the right credentials, and where has it gotten us?
He believes, and I humbly agree, that it's time to give someone with dust on his boots
the helm."
The dust on his boots claim was designed to make Hegseth's authenticity outweigh his lack
of credentials, but former Marine pilot Amy McGrath pointed out that Trump's Defense
Secretary James Mattis and Biden's Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, both of whom reached
the top ranks of the military, each came from the infantry.
Hegseth has settled an accusation of sexual assault, appears to have a history of alcohol
abuse and has been accused of financial mismanagement at two small veterans' nonprofits.
But he appears to embody the sort of strongman ethos
Trump craves.
Jonathan Shate of the Atlantic did a deep dive
into Hegseth's recent books and concluded that Hegseth
considers himself to be at war with basically everybody
to Trump's left.
And it is by no means clear that he means war metaphorically.
Hegseth's books suggest he thinks that everything
that does not support the MAGA worldview is Marxist, including voters choosing Democrats
at the voting booth. He calls for the categorical defeat of the left and says that without its
utter annihilation, America cannot and will not survive.
When Hegseth was in the Army National Guard, a fellow service member who was the unit's security guard
and on an anti-terrorism team,
flagged Hegseth to their unit's leadership
because one of his tattoos is used by white supremacists.
Extremist tattoos are prohibited by army regulations.
Hegseth lobbied Trump to intervene in the cases of service members accused of war
crimes and he cheered on Trump's January 6, 2021 rally. Hegseth has said women do
not belong in combat and has been vocal about his opposition to the equality and
inclusion measures in the military
that he calls woke.
Wittes noted after today's hearing that the words Russia and Ukraine barely came up.
The words China and Taiwan made only marginally more conspicuous an appearance.
The defense of Europe?
One would hardly know such a place as Europe even existed.
By contrast, the words lethality, woke, and DEI came up repeatedly.
The nominee sparred with members of the committee over the difference between equality and equity.
Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker, a Republican of Mississippi, spoke
today in favor of Hegseth, and Republicans initially uncomfortable with the nominee appeared
to be coming around to supporting him. But Hegseth refused to meet with
Democrats on the committee and they made it clear they will not make the vote
easy for Republicans. The top Democrat on the committee, Senator Jack Reid, a
Democrat of Rhode Island, said he did not believe Hegseth was qualified for the position.
Senator Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat of Illinois, exposed his lack of knowledge about U.S. allies and bluntly told him he was unqualified,
later telling MSNBC that Hegseth will be an easy target for adversaries with blackmail material. Hegseth told the Armed Services Committee
that all the negative information about him
was part of a smear campaign,
at the same time that he refused to say
he would refuse to shoot peaceful protesters in the legs
or refuse an unconstitutional order.
After the release of Jack Smith's report,
Trump posted on his social media channel that regardless of what he had done to the country, voters had exonerated him.
Jack is a lame-brained prosecutor who was unable to get his case tried before the election, which I won in a landslide, he wrote, lying about a victory in which more voters chose someone other than him.
The voters have spoken.
It's as if the Confederates' descendants have captured the government of the United States.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.