They called it the “command center,” a set of rooms and suites in the posh Willard hotel a block from the White House where some of President Donald Trump’s most loyal lieutenants were working day and night with one goal in mind: overturning the results of the 2020 election, reported the Washington Post.
The Jan. 6 rally on the Ellipse and the ensuing attack on
the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob would draw the world’s attention to the quest to
physically block Congress from affirming Joe Biden’s victory. But the
activities at the Willard that week add to an emerging picture of a less
visible effort, mapped out in memos by
a conservative pro-Trump legal scholar and pursued by a team of presidential
advisers and lawyers seeking to pull off what they claim was a legal strategy
to reinstate Trump for a second term.
They were led by Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani.
Former chief White House strategist Stephen K. Bannon was an occasional
presence as the effort’s senior political adviser. Former New York City police
commissioner Bernard
Kerik was there as an investigator. Also present was John Eastman, the
scholar, who outlined scenarios for denying Biden the presidency in an Oval
Office meeting on Jan. 4 with Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.
They sought to make the case to Pence and ramp up pressure
on him to take actions on Jan. 6 that Eastman suggested were within his powers,
three people familiar with the operation said, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to describe private conversations. Their activities included finding
and publicizing alleged evidence of fraud, urging members of state legislatures
to challenge Biden’s victory and calling on the Trump-supporting public to
press Republican officials in key states.
The effort underscores the extent to which Trump and a
handful of true believers were working until the last possible moment to
subvert the will of the voters, seeking to pressure Pence to delay or even
block certification of the election, leveraging any possible constitutional
loophole to test the boundaries of American democracy.
“I firmly believed then, as I believe now, that the vice
president — as president of the Senate — had the constitutional power to send
the issue back to the states for 10 days to investigate the widespread fraud
and report back well in advance of Inauguration Day, January 20th,” one of
those present, senior campaign aide and former White House special assistant
Boris Epshteyn, told The Washington Post. “Our efforts were focused on
conveying that message.”
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