Trump's Trials - The Republicans who stood up to Trump after the 2020 election
Episode Date: September 14, 2024For this episode of Trump's Trials, host Scott Detrow takes speaks with Dan Reed, the director of the documentary "Stopping the Steal."In the film we hear from Republican officials in Arizona and Geor...gia who wanted Donald Trump to win the 2020 presidential election but were not willing to break the law for him. Follow the show on Apple Podcasts or Spotify for new episodes each Saturday.Sign up for sponsor-free episodes and support NPR's political journalism at plus.npr.org/trumpstrials.Email the show at trumpstrials@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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The Supreme Court justices have issued a major ruling and an election case.
The Justice Department will be relentless in defending the right to vote.
Will you accept the results of the election?
If it's a fair and legal election, absolutely.
It's Trump's Trials from NPR. I'm Scott Detro.
Frankly, we did win this election.
Many states such as Nevada and California set millions of live ballots to every person
on their voter rolls,
whether those individuals had requested ballots or not,
whether they were dead or alive.
This is a fraud on the American public.
This is an embarrassment to our country.
You know, we won, won Georgia just so you understand.
That was then President Trump
in the months after the 2020 election.
Joe Biden, of course, won it,
but Trump kept insisting it was stolen.
He kept putting forward conspiracy after conspiracy.
It all built to January 6th, 2021.
We fight like hell, and if you don't fight like hell,
you're not gonna have a country anymore.
Nearly four years later, at Tuesday's presidential debate,
Trump was asked if he had any regrets
about his actions that day.
I had nothing to do with that
other than they asked me to make a speech.
I showed up for a speech.
Trump is, of course, facing two different criminal cases
and a dozen charges related to his efforts
to overturn
the election, though this week a Georgia judge again narrowed some of the charges he's facing
in the state-level criminal case there.
At the debate, moderator David Muir pressed Trump on the lack of clear evidence tied to
his election lies.
You know this.
You and your allies, 60 cases in front of many judges, many of them Republican.
No judge looked at it.
And said there was no widespread fraud.
They said we didn't have standing.
Again, not true.
The cases went nowhere because there was no evidence of this widespread fraud.
But that didn't stop Trump and his allies from pressuring Republican state officials
to throw out the election results.
In HBO's new documentary, Stopping the Steal, we hear from Republican officials who wanted
Trump to win, but who were not willing to break the law for him.
And when we come back, we will speak to the director,
Dan Reed.
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The day the dinosaurs died.
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I cover the presidential campaign for NPR.
So I go to rallies, a lot of them.
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On How to Do Everything from the team at Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, we try to find the answers
to all your burning questions.
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And we are back with Stopping the Steal director, Dan Reed.
Dan Pex for joining us.
Hi, thank you.
You're originally from the UK. What drew you to this story?
When I came to the realization that it seemed likely that Donald Trump and his entourage
had set out to overturn the results of the 2020 election, I thought, this is insane.
This is like the boldest and most daring heist in political history.
It's actually sort of trying to steal the keys to the White House.
That's quite something.
But I wasn't really, although a lot had been reported on, I wasn't really clear about exactly how this had happened.
And also I thought, well, there are a lot of people who are saying that Trump tried
to steal the election, but maybe they just have a political axe to grind.
Maybe the evidence isn't really there.
So I started to dig around in it.
And what I realized was that, A, no one had really put together the whole story from a
sort of 10,000 foot bird's eye point of view.
And secondly, that all of the key people
who I think stood in the way of this attempt
to subvert democracy were Republicans.
And so I thought, well, why don't I tell this story
through the eyes of the Republicans
who stood in Trump's way
when he tried to overturn the election results.
I think one of the things the film does very well is lay out in a chronological way, just in a very straightforward way,
all of the things that Donald Trump was saying from early in the morning of election night when he comes into the White House and says, frankly, we did win this election on. At rallies, in interviews, at White House appearances, you intercut that with things
that his legal team, the elite strike force as they called themselves at one point, Rudy
Giuliani and others are saying.
And I have a couple of questions about that.
One is that there were a lot of moments and I was
covering the campaign.
I was mostly focused on the transition that was
already underway, but I was, you know, I was
paying close attention.
There were a lot of these moments that in real
time felt farcical.
They felt like they could not be a serious
attempt.
And I think Rudy Giuliani sweating off his hair
dye is a very good example of that.
And then when you know what it all led to,
when you know the violence of January 6th
and how close things came to toppling over,
they kind of take on a different meaning.
And I'm wondering, as you were going through this footage,
if you thought any differently about it
than you may have when you saw it in real time.
I think you put your finger on something important,
which is that the way the steel,
if that's what we're gonna call the attempt
to overturn the election results in 2020, the way the steal unfolded was a series of events that
could be seen as quite trivial, or absurd and burlesque and comical, as you just said.
And I think it takes the passage of time and also the assembling of these moments into
something coherent, into something that seems like a conspiracy really to steal the election.
It takes that to be able to feel the chilling effects of a consistent and sustained execution
of a plan.
That's what it was.
Giuliani and co. went from state to state through the swing states and President
Trump reached out in person to very obscure officials.
I think one of the Gabriel Sterling, one of the protagonists in the Georgia drama says
nobody should ever know who I am.
Nobody would have ever known who I am were it not for this terrible thing that happened.
And so I think, you know, what you have is a series of quite kind of small events and small skirmishes, if you like, in the election story, and none of which are for all its drama, was not really the most significant event in the steel.
What was?
Well, the steel was what happened, was the cumulative effects of what happened before
January 6th.
President Trump's embrace of John Eastman, the constitutional lawyer, in the hope of
convincing everyone that Mike Pence would be able to
simply change the results of the election.
So I think it's that sort of the slow steady strangulation of the democratic process that
with the perspective we now have seems really chilling and dangerous.
But at the time, I think, you know, as you said, you were there, it seems crazy, it seems
nuts.
The reason I mentioned at the very top that you're originally from the UK
is because I think one powerful line of response
to all of this over the last four years
from President Biden, from others,
is what did all of this say to the rest of the world
about American democracy?
The attempts to overturn the election,
how close they came to actually happening,
the violence of January 6.
Do you have any thoughts on that after finishing this project and spending so much time thinking
really closely about this?
America has always been, despite the ups and downs over the years and whatever political
angles one might take on how American democracy has played out.
America has always been that shining beacon on the hill in terms of how we practice democracy
in the rest of the world.
And I'm saying that as a Brit, I am filled with apprehension and even perhaps a little
bit of fear as I put together this story. It's made me
a little afraid. But I hope we're heading towards a new era in American politics and
all this will go away and we'll look back and it will be like a bad dream.
That was Dan Reed, director of the upcoming documentary, Stopping the Steal. It premieres
on MAX September 17th. Thank you so much.
Awesome. Thank you, Scott.
Thanks to our supporters who hear the show sponsor free. If that is not you, still could
be. You can sign up at plus.npr.org or subscribe on our show page and Apple podcasts. This
show is produced by Tyler Bartleman, edited by Adam Rainey, Krishnadev Kalamur and Steve
Drummond. Our executive producers are Beth Donovan and Sammy Yenigan.
Eric Maripotti is NPR's vice president of news programming.
I'm Scott Detro.
Thanks for listening to Trump's Trials from NPR.
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