then chief United StateAnd Donald TrumpAt the end of last year, the US Department of Justice pressed the declaration that the elections were “corrupt”, despite the absence of widespread cases of fraud, The New York Times revealed Friday (30).
Trump’s intention was to use the statement, with his allies in Congress, to try to reverse the defeat suffered by the current US president, Joe Biden. The newspaper says it released the information based on documents submitted to lawmakers and obtained by journalist Katie Benner.
The Ministry of Justice handed over the documents to The House Oversight and Reform Committee, which is investigating the Trump administration’s efforts to illegally reverse the election result.
During a phone call on December 27, 2020, Trump reportedly lobbied then-interim attorney general Jeffrey Rosen and his deputy, Richard B. (see below).
In the United States, the Attorney General has powers equivalent to the positions of Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Republic in Brazil.
According to the newspaper, Donoghue warned that the Department of Justice had no authority to alter the outcome of the election.. Trump responded that he did not expect that, according to remarks the deputy attorney general made to remind the conversation, but said:
“Suffice it to say that the election was corrupt and leave the rest to me and the members of Congress,” the deputy attorney general wrote in summarizing Trump’s response. R will be short for Republican Party.
No evidence of fraud
Weeks before that, US Attorney General William Barr said that The Ministry of Justice did not find any evidence of electoral fraud (see video below).
Bar said that “Investigations by federal prosecutors and FBI agents have found no evidence of widespread election fraud that could alter the outcome of the election.”.
The head of the US Department of Justice said there is no evidence of fraud that would alter the elections
Barr resigned days after the statement and before a phone call with Trump. He left Jeffrey Rosen, who held the position until the end of the government, on January 20 this year – including during Trump supporters invade the Capitol.
John Schafer was among Donald Trump’s supporters during the Capitol Invasion. – Photo: ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP
The New York Times wrote: “The demands were an extraordinary example of a president’s interference in an agency that is usually more independent of the White House.” “It’s the latest example of Trump’s intensified campaign, during his final weeks in office, to delegitimize the election.”
The then President of the United States refused to admit defeat in the elections and He claimed that Biden “won because the election was rigged”. Trump claimed “corrupt elections” and tried unsuccessfully to reverse his defeat in several states such as Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania..
In its election investigation, the US Department of Justice found that:
- Michigan’s vote count error was 0.0063%, not the 68% that Trump claimed.
- There was no evidence to support the conspiracy theory that a Pennsylvania official had tampered with the ballot;
- After examining a video and interviewing witnesses, the administration found no evidence of election fraud in Fulton County, Georgia.
“These handwritten notes show that President Trump has directed directly to our nation’s highest law enforcement agency to take steps to nullify free and fair elections on the days the last of his presidency. reform committee.
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