What A Day - DOJ Validates Trump's 2020 Election Lies

Episode Date: February 2, 2026

President Trump is still not over the fact that he lost the 2020 presidential election to Joe Biden, which might be why last Wednesday, the FBI executed a search warrant on an election facility in Fu...lton County, Georgia. Agents seized hundreds of boxes containing ballots and other documents related to the 2020 election. But this raid is just one of many ways the President has challenged the American election system since taking office a year ago. With the midterms just months away, we spoke with Marc Elias, the founder of the voting rights news and election-tracking site Democracy Docket.And in headlines, the government is partially shut down as Congress debates reining in immigration enforcement, the Trump administration does damage control after the latest and largest batch of Epstein files, and the five-year-old boy and father detained by immigration officers in Minnesota have been released.Show Notes: Check out Democracy Docket – www.democracydocket.com/ Call Congress – 202-224-3121 Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8 What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcast Follow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/ For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 It's Monday, February 2nd. I'm Jane Coastin, and this is what a day. The show that hopes the release of two black journalists over the weekend, former CNN host Don Lemon, and Minnesota reporter Georgia Fort, is a sign of better things to come in Black History Month. Both were arrested for covering an anti-ice protest at a church last month. Fort told CNN, quote, If they can criminalize a journalist here in Minnesota, whether you're independent or not, I think that we've seen a track record where this is just going to continue to escalate. In the immortal words of my late grandmother, mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:00:41 On today's show, here we are again. The government is partially shut down. This time, Congress debates reigning in immigration enforcement. And a massive trove of Epstein files traps. It's shady as hell and probably nothing will happen. But let's start with elections. Texas was a site of two big Democratic wins this weekend. First, Christian Menofie won the state's 18th congressional district on Saturday,
Starting point is 00:01:07 winnowing down the Republican majority in the U.S. House to just four seats. Then in Tarrant County, Democrat and Air Force veteran, Taylor Romet, pulled off a 14-plus-point victory in a state Senate special election, taking a district President Donald Trump won by 17 points in 2024. It's that second race that attracted Trump's attention. He posted about it multiple times on. through social before the election, demanding, quote, all America First Patriots in Texas's ninth state Senate district vote for the Republican
Starting point is 00:01:36 candidate. But I guess all the America First Patriots in Texas's ninth state Senate district were busy. And anyway, Trump made it very clear at Marilago on Sunday that he actually didn't care about or know anything about that race. I don't know. I didn't hear about it. Somebody ran where? In Texas, special election for legislative seat.
Starting point is 00:01:54 The ninth state senate seat. I'm not involved in that. That's a local Texas race. You mean I won by 17 and this person lost? Things like that happened. Sure. But Trump is very, very concerned with one election, the 2020 presidential election, which he lost to President Joe Biden, a fact Trump cannot seem to move past.
Starting point is 00:02:18 Which might be why last Wednesday, the FBI executed a search warrant on an election facility in Fulton County, Georgia, seeking records related to the 2020 election. Speaker Mike Johnson tried to put some lipstick on that particular pig on Meet the Press on Sunday. Here he is speaking to host Kristen Welker. Is it healthy for this country's democracy, for the sitting president to be questioning the 2020 election five years ago, something claims that have been deemed to be false again now that he lost? What's healthy for our country and our democracy is for everyone to be laser-focused on election integrity. But that's not election integrity, Mr. Speaker.
Starting point is 00:02:59 This was asked and answered and litigated and relitigated. The page has been turned. He's still talking about an election that he lost allegations which have been deemed claimed. The president is keeping the focus on election integrity. It must be in the forefront of everyone's minds because if you don't have a free and fair election, you cannot maintain a constitutional republic. Fact check. Trump cares about election integrity for one candidate and one candidate only, himself.
Starting point is 00:03:24 And even then, I don't think the integrity part is really what he's focused on. This raid is just one of many ways the president has challenged the American election system since taking office a year ago. With the midterms just months away, I spoke to Mark Elias, the founder of the voting rights news and election tracking site, Democracy Docket. We talked about some real threats to U.S. election integrity, many of which are coming from the White House. Mark, welcome to what today. Thanks for having me. On Wednesday, we saw the FBI seize 2020 election ballots from a warehouse in Fulton County, Georgia. And on Thursday, during the president's cabinet meeting, Trump said the search found, quote,
Starting point is 00:04:03 burn bags of information detailing, quote, how corrupt the 2020 election was. So what the hell was the FBI doing in Fulton County? Okay, so first of all, whatever the FBI was doing here in Fulton County, and I don't have any inside information, I rather doubt there were burnbacks sitting there. with 2020 materials, right? Trump likes going with the birdbags thing. Like, this is not the first time he has rolled that out. But look, this is actually quite dangerous.
Starting point is 00:04:30 The Department of Justice executed a search warrant against Fulton County to seize ballots related to the 2020 election. This is after Donald Trump told the New York Times, remember, in the Oval Office, that he wished he had seized the ballots in Georgia back in the 2020 timeframe. And as we head towards 2026, I worry, yes, I worry about the lies that this will re-obey,
Starting point is 00:04:51 open and spread around the 2020 election. What I'm really worried, though, is that this is just a dry run in him figuring out how one seizes ballots as we head towards 2026. Can you talk a little bit more about that? Because I know that midterm elections are run by states and localities. So what would that look like? If Trump wanted to steal the 26 midterms, how would he do it? Yeah. So all federal elections are run by the states. In fact, it used to be conservatives who would gleefully point out that there is no such thing as federal elections, there are just state elections that elect people to federal office. But there's truth to it, right, which is that the state of Georgia runs elections for federal office, whether it's for presidential electors, whether it's for members of the House,
Starting point is 00:05:35 members of the Senate. And there really isn't a role for the federal government outside of Congress passing laws. And there's really no role at all for the president. But, you know, what I worry about, where I think a lot of people worry about is basically a two-part strategy on the part of this president. The first is before the election to get access to the nationwide voter file, and that's something that's going on right now, so that he has the private voter information on every single American. And before the election, they use that to try to threaten states or cajole states or in some places just work with states to remove large numbers of voters in mass, you know, through voter challenges, something we have dealt with before where right-wing outside groups do
Starting point is 00:06:17 this, but never before we've seen the Department of Justice to it. So that's a lot of number one. But number two is after the ballots have been cast, the concern is, and what we just saw in Fulton County, is that, you know, the next morning Donald Trump sends the FBI in to, you know, some congressional district in a close congressional race or in a statewide race for Senate, and says we're seizing the ballots, and we're going to count them. And that's what I am so worried about. I've been worried about this for months. I've been writing about this and talking about this for months. You know, if he figures out once how to seize ballots and issue false results and that the legacy media winds up reporting these in kind of the, on the one hand, on the other hand, he will have scored
Starting point is 00:06:59 an enormous victory as we head towards 2026 and 28. FBI seizures are not the only way the Trump administration is trying to get voter data. Since May, the Department of Justice has asked nearly every state to hand over some form of voter data, and it's suing states that haven't done so. Attorney General Pam Bondi even says, sent a letter to Minnesota Governor Tim Wall, suggesting that the government would pull back on its immigration enforcement bananas bullshit there if the state handed over data involving its voter rolls. What's at stake here if the Trump administration is able to get the data they want? Okay. So look, I have said this is the biggest legal issue of this year. And yeah, I know how many
Starting point is 00:07:37 other big legal issues there are. But if you care about democracy, the single biggest fight to watch in court is over access to these voter rolls. It may very well be one of the top political. political stories right now, and it's not being adequately understood. Here is the deal. If you're a Democratic campaign, you want to turn out voters. What do you need? You need a list of the voters. You need to know who they are and where they live and how to reach them. Well, if you need to suppress voters, if you want to mass disenfranchise voters, you need the same thing. And so the Department of Justice has told every state in the country that it expects them to turn over the full unredacted voter file. That means your name, your address, your social security number,
Starting point is 00:08:15 a specimen of your signature in many places, your gender, your race, whether you're a registered Democrat or Republican, whether you voted by mail or voted in person, whether you've moved and changed registration, whether you canceled it or updated it, whether you've ever been, have your ballot challenge before or not, whether you vote early or on election day, whether you've ever voted provisionally, voted overseas. It is a complete 360 look of every voter at the individual level. This is not data that any department justice has ever sought before because they have no legitimate reason to want it. The only reason why the Department of Justice wants this data is because it is the foundational building block for them to disenfranchise
Starting point is 00:08:55 voters at scale in the run-up to the election or after the election to disenfranchise them in the counting. So let's say that Department of Justice decided the day after the 2026 election, the morning after the 26 election, that it wanted to seize the ballots. Well, without counting the ballots, make rough cuts and just say, look, all of the people who voted in this precinct, their votes don't count. All of the people who voted by mail in this way, their votes don't count. And how would they do that in these rough categories? They do it by having the voter file. And I'm proud that my law firm and I are litigating in all 24 jurisdictions, 23 states and District of Columbia, to fight against this. And any other places that they sue to try to get these, we will fight. So far, we have won the
Starting point is 00:09:41 first few cases, but there are a lot more to go. The Trump administration, it's worth mentioning. They've been working to change the mechanisms of American elections on a lot of different fronts. And honestly, even though we're just a year in, it's been hard to keep track of. How does this raid fit into the bigger picture of what Trump has tried to do with elections? Yeah, so it's interesting. Remember, Donald Trump in 2017 appointed a election fraud commission because he said that he, in fact, had won California in 2016, and that it had been stolen from him. He has said that he won New Jersey.
Starting point is 00:10:14 He has said that he won Minnesota three times, right? Like, he has been spreading lies about the elections. And that, those underpin certain choices about how people vote and how ballots are counted. So in Donald Trump's ideal world, and this is informed not just by his own pathology, but by what the RNC has told him would benefit Republicans, they would like no early voting just in just election day, no vote center. is just precincts, no mailing voting at all, right? And we see them take these approaches in the court cases they are bringing. We see this in the executive orders that Donald Trump is trying to issue
Starting point is 00:10:51 because they believe that if they got to that place, they would disenfranchise black, brown, and young voters at higher rates than they'd disenfranchise anyone else. And that that could swing the outcome of future elections. Like I said, the good news is that they don't actually control, the states control these things, not the federal government. On top of that, last year, Trump kicked off an unusually aggressive round of gerrymandering that has gone in a bunch of different directions. We've talked about this, you and I, and we've talked about this on the show, but can you explain why this is so unusual? Yeah, so, you know, the Constitution says that there's a census every decade and there's
Starting point is 00:11:25 redistricting every decade. And in the early 2000s, there was a mid-cycle redistrict in Texas. Tom DeLay did this. And it was really viewed as a one-off. And we could go into the reasons why, I mean, I was against it at the time, but there was, there were reasons. having to do with a change of control legislature, why Texas Republicans did that. What's really different this time is that the mid-cycle redistricting is not being spurred by any legislative chamber control or any governmental control. It's simply being spurred because Donald Trump told these Republican legislatures to engage in mid-cycle redistricting.
Starting point is 00:11:59 And we have seen them do it in Texas. We've seen them do it in Missouri. We've seen them do it in North Carolina. We are about to witness them do it in Florida. and in all of those states, and this is, I think, the key point I want people to take away. In all of those states, you already had extremely gerrymandered maps. Well, now with computers and big data, they found a way to draw a more gerrymandered map. And that is what you are seeing in all of these Republican states.
Starting point is 00:12:24 And it is because they know that if they don't do this and they don't engage in voter suppression, election subversion, they're going to lose control of Congress. They're for sure going to lose control of the House. They may very well lose control of the Senate. And that would be the stumbling block that Donald Trump fears the most. It's interesting because I think that Trump seemed to believe that he could gerrymandar, but Democrats just wouldn't respond. But now you've got Texas, you've got California and a bunch of other states in various
Starting point is 00:12:49 stages of changing their maps. So where are we right now? Yeah. So the way I think about the math is this. We can set aside the whether they perform or not, but essentially five seats in Texas. For Republicans, five seats in California for Democrats. Then Republicans added one seat in Missouri. added one seat in North Carolina. Again, I'm not giving up on those races. I'm just like using
Starting point is 00:13:10 rough strokes here. Democrats, thanks to a lawsuit that my law firm brought, look like they will pick up a seat in New York, and we are waiting to see what Maryland does. They are currently considering it. And then you get to the two wild card states, which are Florida for Republicans and Virginia for Democrats. Virginia have undertaken a process that requires passing things through legislature and then a ballot initiative that, if successful, could yield four more Democratic seats. Ronda Santos has said he is going to call the Republican legislature back into session in April in Florida, and that could be three or four seats. And the big wild card, the big thing that everyone is watching is the Supreme Court and its decision in a Voting Rights Act case out of Louisiana,
Starting point is 00:13:51 if that decision comes late enough in the cycle, regardless of how it comes out, won't have an impact. If it comes early enough, like in the next month, then you could see Republicans try to gerrymander another dozen or more seats, mostly in the deep south, by taking away black opportunity. It feels incredibly overwhelming to be seeing these bullshit ice operations and feel like we're just engulfed in crisis. And then this feels almost quiet in comparison for Trump to be pushing this narrative that our elections are not secure, or I think more accurately, elections, Republicans don't win are not secure or are fraudulent. The midterms, as you've mentioned, are just a few months away, and you said that what we saw in Georgia, quote, looks like a dry run for
Starting point is 00:14:34 26. I know you've been talking about this, but can you just make the point again? Like, what do you mean? Look, we saw what happened in 2020, which was a lot of rhetoric and people told us not to worry. And then we saw after he lost him bring 60 plus lawsuits, I was proud to represent President Biden in the Democratic Party in leading the effort to beat those, and we won. And then what did we see? We saw violence, right? We saw violence on January 6th. And then we've now seen the Department of Justice seize those ballots. Well, now let's just take those lessons from Donald Trump's standpoint.
Starting point is 00:15:11 We have already seen the rhetoric. He has already badmouthed elections. We have seen the legal actions, right? They're trying to get these voter files, but they are losing. So what comes next? Well, we have seen the terrible violence that has already taken place in Minneapolis. And we have seen how that violence is now being leveraged into the next phase, which is how do they get control of the vote counting, the ballots,
Starting point is 00:15:37 disenfranchised voters at scale. And I think if you do not believe, if you do not understand that he will use the tools available to him, then you're just not paying attention to what he has already done, what he's already said he wished he had done in 2020, and what we are seeing him already start to do in 26. Mark, as always, thank you so much for joining me. Thanks for having me. That was my conversation with Mark Elias, founder of Democracy Docket.
Starting point is 00:16:04 We've got more news coming up, but if you like the show, make sure to subscribe wherever you listen. Leave a five-star review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts or even check us out on YouTube. And don't forget to share with your friends or to come after some ads. What a Day is brought to you by Bookes. I absolutely love Valentine's Day. Really? And I love flowers. I don't know that the best flowers come from the Bookes Company and make my day. And right now you'll save 25% with code WOD.
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Starting point is 00:16:57 That's Boukes.com. What a day is brought to you by Acorns. investing was really scary to me. It sounded hard and complicated, and like it was for people who knew more than I did, and definitely for people with more to invest than I had. But it turns out that anyone can make their money get them towards their goals. Acorns is a financial wellness app that cares about where your money is going tomorrow. Acorns is a smart way to give your money a chance to grow. It's easy. You can sign up in minutes and start automatically investing your spare money, even if all you've got is spare change. And Acorns grows with you, whether you're just starting out
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Starting point is 00:18:08 Results do not predict or represent the performance of any Acorn's portfolio. Investment results will vary. Investing involves risk. Acorns Advisors, LLC, and SEC registered investment advisor. View important disclosures at acorns.com slash WOD. Here's what else we're following today. Headlines. Are you confident that the government will reopen on Monday with Republican votes?
Starting point is 00:18:36 Do you have enough Republican support? Well, let's say I'm confident that we'll do it at least by Tuesday. House Speaker Mike Johnson had more to say to Kristen Walker on NBC's Meet the Press on Sunday. He answered questions about the latest shutdown debacle. Are you feeling deja vu yet? The U.S. government partially shut down Saturday morning after lawmakers missed the January 30th deadline to pass a spending bill. Senate Democrats want to rewrite the House's proposal after two U.S. citizens were shot and killed by federal immigration agents of Minnesota. Not to mention the general concerns about the general concerns about.
Starting point is 00:19:06 abuse of power and lack of oversight at the Department of Homeland Security. They're demanding changes before they agree to back its funding. Senate Democrats succeeded in stripping DHS funding out of the original package and replacing it with a two-week stopgap to give Dems time to negotiate with the White House. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries reiterated the changes Democrats want to make on ABCs this week Sunday. Body cameras should be mandatory. Mass should come off. Judicial warrants should absolutely be required consistent with the Constitution.
Starting point is 00:19:36 in our view before DHS agents or ICE agents are breaking into the homes of the American people or ripping people out of their cars. With a thin majority in the House, since some Republicans fraying on immigration enforcement tactics, we'll find out if Johnson can keep his historically locked, stepped party in line. Among these new files is a list compiled by the FBI just in August of numerous salacious, and to be really clear, unverified allegations about President Trump. Trump. Why did the FBI create this list last year and have all of these claims been investigated by the DOJ? So look, it's not about President Trump. It's about a ton of people, multiple, multiple people that were, quote, in the Epstein files. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche
Starting point is 00:20:28 brushed off President Trump's newest appearance in the Epstein files in conversation with CNN's Dana Bash on Sunday. That's after the Department of Justice released its largest batch of files yet related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The trove includes unverified tips about Epstein's relationships with powerful figures. Many who you've heard of and some you may not have. And according to the New York Times, about 4,500 documents mentioned President Trump, including more than a dozen tips collected from the public. But Blanche says many of the tips involving Trump are anonymous or secondhand and are therefore,
Starting point is 00:21:00 quote, not something that can be really investigated. I seem to recall that never stopping Trump before. And curiously, according to the Hill, the documents containing the Trump-related tips disappeared from the DOJ's website and were not back by Sunday morning. Nothing to see here, folks. Blanche said this is likely the last major release of files and made clear that even these new documents were probably not going to satisfy the public's interest in this case. You can say that again. What role would you want in a future of Venezuelan government? Because even President Trump says you may have a role in the future.
Starting point is 00:21:36 Would you run for president? I will be present when the time comes, but it doesn't matter that should be decided in elections by the Venezuelan people. Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Carino Machado appeared confident, speaking with Margaret Brennan on CBS's Face Nation Sunday. A, strangely confident tone, some might say, after President Trump publicly questioned her viability as leader, saying she, quote, doesn't have the support or the respect within the country.
Starting point is 00:22:04 Machado said she thinks Venezuela's political shift is inevitable, even if there isn't currently an election scheduled on the books yet. Is Machado secretly furious that she's not the one leading Venezuela? Possibly. But she's clearly playing the long game. She also knows how to speak fluent Trump. And nowhere is that clearer than here. Why did you give your Nobel Peace Prize to President Trump
Starting point is 00:22:25 after you'd already dedicated it to him? Look, I think this is a matter of justice, and it's a matter of what's in the superior interest. of our country. We the Venezuelan people are truly grateful for what he has done and we're confident in what he will do in the days, weeks and months to come. Sounds like fluent Trump to me. Do you remember seeing images of a boy wearing that blue bunny hat and a Spider-Man backpack surrounded by immigration officers? That's Liam Canejo Ramos. The five-year-old boy and his father were detained by immigration officers in Minnesota last month and held at a
Starting point is 00:23:09 an ICE facility in Texas. Now, following a judge's order, they've been released. The government claimed his father entered the U.S. illegally from Ecuador in 2024. The family's lawyer said he has an asylum claim pending that allows him to stay in the U.S. Texas Democratic representative, Joaquin Castro, visited Liam and his dad while they were at the detention facility. Castro spoke with PBS NewsHour ahead of their release. We could not figure out why they were snatched up off the street. They had another asylum hearing coming up, I believe is what Liam's father said. And these were people that followed every rule. They used the CBP1 app to get permission to come into the United States and wait while their asylum claim was being processed. So they followed the rules. They did it in orderly way.
Starting point is 00:23:54 They didn't rush the border. And still, the Trump administration picked them up off the street and dumped them in rural Texas. In his order granting the release, U.S. District Judge Fred Beery blasted the administration, writing, quote, the case says it's genesis in the ill-conceived and incompetently implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas, apparently, even if it requires traumatizing children. Castro said in a post on Twitter
Starting point is 00:24:20 that he picked Liam and his dad up Saturday night and escorted them back to Minnesota Sunday morning. He wrote, quote, Liam is not home, with his hat and his backpack. And that's the news. Before we go, you see the headlines, ICE and the war on immigrants, federal police takeovers of major cities, racial profiling.
Starting point is 00:24:52 How did we get here? Crooked's award-winning podcast, Empire City, the untold origin story of the NYPD, breaks it all down. Host Chenjerai Kumanika traces how the biggest police force in the world was built, and what that history tells us about power policing of public safety today. Chen Jenshry is also hosting a virtual Crooked Ideas Empire City podcast club, kicking off March 31st. Together, you'll dig into the themes of the show.
Starting point is 00:25:16 Connect the dots, wrestle with big questions, and imagine what real safety could look like for all of us. Sign up at crookedideas.org slash Empire City. And if you're in Pittsburgh, join us February 17th for a night of learning and discussion in response to community concerns about public safety, featuring Chenjerai Comenica alongside Congresswoman Summer Lee. Get your free tickets at crooked ideas.org slash Empire City.
Starting point is 00:25:41 That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review. Do not let First Lady Melania Trump see New York Times columnist Maureen Doud's review of her little documentary and tell your friends to listen. And if you're into reading, and not just about how Dowd wrote, quote, Melania is where she wants to be, in the bosom of a corrupt family that is prostituting the people's house. Like me, what a day is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at croaker.com slash subscribe. I'm Jane Koston and Dowd also wrote, quote, Melania, the movie star,
Starting point is 00:26:13 lives up to the message on the infamous jacket she wore to a migrant child detention center. I really don't care, do you? It turns out she does care. For herself. Woof. What a day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Desmond Taylor. Our associate producers are Emily Four and Chris Alport. Our producer is Caitlin Blummer.
Starting point is 00:26:42 Our video editor is Joseph Tutra. Our video producer is Johanna Case. We had a production help today from Ethan Oberman, Greg Walters, and Matt Burke. Our senior producer is Erica Morrison, and our senior vice president of News and Politics is Adrian Hill. Our theme music is by Kyle Murdoch and Jordan Cantor. We had helped today from the Associated Press. Our production staff is proudly unionized with the Writers Guild of America East.

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