Former President Donald Trump and a little known Justice Department lawyer, Jeffrey Clark, attempted to force out Acting Attorney General Jeffrey A. Rosen in order to overthrow the election. A bloodless coup d'etat that nearly toppled the government, according to The New York Times.
The Justice Department’s top leaders listened in
stunned silence this month: One of their peers, they were told, had devised a
plan with President Donald J. Trump to oust Jeffrey A. Rosen as acting attorney
general and wield the department’s power to force Georgia state lawmakers to
overturn its presidential election results.
The unassuming lawyer who worked on the plan,
Jeffrey Clark, had been devising ways to cast doubt on the election results and
to bolster Mr. Trump’s continuing legal battles and the pressure on Georgia
politicians. Because Mr. Rosen had refused the president’s entreaties to carry
out those plans, Mr. Trump was about to decide whether to fire Mr. Rosen and
replace him with Mr. Clark.
The department officials, convened on a conference
call, then asked each other: What will you do if Mr. Rosen is dismissed?
The answer was unanimous. They would resign.
Their informal pact ultimately helped persuade Mr.
Trump to keep Mr. Rosen in place, calculating that a furor over mass
resignations at the top of the Justice Department would eclipse any attention
on his baseless accusations of voter fraud. Mr. Trump’s decision came only
after Mr. Rosen and Mr. Clark made their competing cases to him in a bizarre
White House meeting that two officials compared with an episode of Mr. Trump’s
reality show “The Apprentice,” albeit one that could prompt a constitutional
crisis.
The previously unknown chapter was the culmination
of the president’s long-running effort to batter the Justice Department into
advancing his personal agenda. He also pressed Mr. Rosen to appoint special
counsels, including one who would look into Dominion Voting Systems, a maker of
election equipment that Mr. Trump’s allies had falsely said was working with
Venezuela to flip votes from Mr. Trump to Joseph R. Biden Jr.
This account of the department’s final days under
Mr. Trump’s leadership is based on interviews with four former Trump
administration officials who asked not to be named because of fear of
retaliation.
Mr. Clark said that this account contained
inaccuracies but did not specify, adding that he could not discuss any
conversations with Mr. Trump or Justice Department lawyers because of “the
strictures of legal privilege.” “Senior Justice Department lawyers, not
uncommonly, provide legal advice to the White House as part of our duties,” he
said. “All my official communications were consistent with law.”
Mr. Clark categorically denied that he devised any
plan to oust Mr. Rosen, or to formulate recommendations for action based on
factual inaccuracies gleaned from the internet. “My practice is to rely on
sworn testimony to assess disputed factual claims,” Mr. Clark said. “There was
a candid discussion of options and pros and cons with the president. It is
unfortunate that those who were part of a privileged legal conversation would
comment in public about such internal deliberations, while also distorting any
discussions.”
Mr. Clark also noted that he was the lead signatory
on a Justice Department request last month asking a federal judge to reject a lawsuit that sought to pressure Vice President
Mike Pence to overturn the results of the election.
Mr. Trump declined to comment. An adviser said that
Mr. Trump has consistently argued that the justice system should investigate
“rampant election fraud that has plagued our system for years.”
The adviser added that “any assertion to the
contrary is false and being driven by those who wish to keep the system
broken.” Mr. Clark agreed and said that “legal privileges” prevented him from
divulging specifics regarding the conversation.
A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment,
as did Mr. Rosen.
When Mr. Trump said on Dec. 14 that Attorney General William P.
Barr was leaving the department, some officials thought that he might allow Mr.
Rosen a short reprieve before pressing him about voter fraud. After all, Mr.
Barr would be around for another week.
Instead, Mr. Trump summoned Mr. Rosen to the Oval
Office the next day. He wanted the Justice Department to file legal briefs
supporting his allies’ lawsuits seeking to overturn his election loss. And he
urged Mr. Rosen to appoint special counsels to investigate not only unfounded
accusations of widespread voter fraud, but also Dominion, the voting machines
firm.
(Dominion has sued the pro-Trump lawyer Sidney Powell, who inserted
those accusations into four federal lawsuits about voter irregularities that
were all dismissed.)
Mr. Rosen refused. He maintained that he would make
decisions based on the facts and the law, and he reiterated what Mr. Barr had
privately told Mr. Trump: The department had investigated voting irregularities
and found no evidence of widespread fraud.
But Mr. Trump continued to press Mr. Rosen after the
meeting — in phone calls and in person. He repeatedly said that he did not
understand why the Justice Department had not found evidence that supported
conspiracy theories about the election that some of his personal lawyers had
espoused. He declared that the department was not fighting hard enough for him.
As Mr. Rosen and the deputy attorney general,
Richard P. Donoghue, pushed back, they were unaware that Mr. Clark had been
introduced to Mr. Trump by a Pennsylvania politician and had told the president
that he agreed that fraud had affected the election results.
Mr. Trump quickly embraced Mr. Clark, who had been
appointed the acting head of the civil division in September and was also the
head of the department’s environmental and natural resources division.
As December wore on, Mr. Clark mentioned to Mr.
Rosen and Mr. Donoghue that he spent a lot of time reading on the internet — a
comment that alarmed them because they inferred that he believed the unfounded
conspiracy theory that Mr. Trump had won the election. Mr. Clark also told them
that he wanted the department to hold a news conference announcing that it was
investigating serious accusations of election fraud. Mr. Rosen and Mr. Donoghue
rejected the proposal.
As Mr. Trump focused increasingly on Georgia, a
state he lost narrowly to Mr. Biden, he complained to Justice Department
leaders that the U.S. attorney in Atlanta, Byung J. Pak, was not trying to find
evidence for false election claims pushed by Mr. Trump’s lawyer Rudolph W.
Giuliani and others. Mr. Donoghue warned Mr. Pak that the president was now
fixated on his office, and that it might not be tenable for him to continue to
lead it, according to two people familiar with the conversation.
That conversation and Mr. Trump’s efforts to pressure Georgia’s Republican secretary of state
to “find” him votes compelled Mr. Pak to abruptly resign this month.
Mr. Clark was also focused on Georgia. He drafted a
letter that he wanted Mr. Rosen to send to Georgia state legislators that
wrongly said that the Justice Department was investigating accusations of voter
fraud in their state, and that they should move to void Mr. Biden’s win there.
Mr. Rosen and Mr. Donoghue again rejected Mr.
Clark’s proposal.
On New Year’s Eve, the trio met to discuss Mr.
Clark’s refusal to hew to the department’s conclusion that the election results
were valid. Mr. Donoghue flatly told Mr. Clark that what he was doing was
wrong. The next day, Mr. Clark told Mr. Rosen — who had mentored him while they
worked together at the law firm Kirkland & Ellis — that he was going
to discuss his strategy with the president early the next week, just before
Congress was set to certify Mr. Biden’s electoral victory.
Unbeknown to the acting attorney general, Mr. Clark’s
timeline moved up. He met with Mr. Trump over the weekend, then informed Mr.
Rosen midday on Sunday that the president intended to replace him with Mr.
Clark, who could then try to stop Congress from certifying the Electoral
College results. He said that Mr. Rosen could stay on as his deputy attorney
general, leaving Mr. Rosen speechless.
Unwilling to step down without a fight, Mr. Rosen
said that he needed to hear straight from Mr. Trump and worked with the White
House counsel, Pat A. Cipollone, to convene a meeting for early that evening.
Even as Mr. Clark’s pronouncement was sinking in,
stunning news broke out of Georgia: State officials had recorded an hourlong
call, published by The Washington Post, during which Mr.
Trump pressured them to manufacture enough votes to declare him the victor. As
the fallout from the recording ricocheted through Washington, the president’s
desperate bid to change the outcome in Georgia came into sharp focus.
Mr. Rosen and Mr. Donoghue pressed ahead, informing
Steven Engel, the head of the Justice Department’s office of legal counsel,
about Mr. Clark’s latest maneuver. Mr. Donoghue convened a late-afternoon call
with the department’s remaining senior leaders, laying out Mr. Clark’s efforts
to replace Mr. Rosen.
Mr. Rosen planned to soon head to the White House to
discuss his fate, Mr. Donoghue told the group. Should Mr. Rosen be fired, they
all agreed to resign en masse. For some, the plan brought to mind the so-called
Saturday Night Massacre of the Nixon era, where Attorney General Elliot L.
Richardson and his deputy resigned rather than carry out the president’s order
to fire the special prosecutor investigating him.
The Clark plan, the officials concluded, would
seriously harm the department, the government and the rule of law. For hours, they
anxiously messaged and called one another as they awaited Mr. Rosen’s fate.
Around 6 p.m., Mr. Rosen, Mr. Donoghue and Mr. Clark
met at the White House with Mr. Trump, Mr. Cipollone, his deputy Patrick
Philbin and other lawyers. Mr. Trump had Mr. Rosen and Mr. Clark present their
arguments to him.
Mr. Cipollone advised the president not to fire Mr.
Rosen and he reiterated, as he had for days, that he did not recommend sending
the letter to Georgia lawmakers. Mr. Engel advised Mr. Trump that he and the department’s
remaining top officials would resign if he fired Mr. Rosen, leaving Mr. Clark
alone at the department.
Mr. Trump seemed somewhat swayed by the idea that
firing Mr. Rosen would trigger not only chaos at the Justice Department, but
also congressional investigations and possibly recriminations from other
Republicans and distract attention from his efforts to overturn the election
results.
After nearly three hours, Mr. Trump ultimately
decided that Mr. Clark’s plan would fail, and he allowed Mr. Rosen to stay.
Mr. Rosen and his deputies concluded they had
weathered the turmoil. Once Congress certified Mr. Biden’s victory, there would
be little for them to do until they left along with Mr. Trump in two weeks.
They began to exhale days later as the Electoral
College certification at the Capitol got underway. And then they received word:
The building had been breached.
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