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that he lost, a fact made clear by the january 6th committee, which exposed to the world that so many trump aides despite towing the trump line in public. are you expecting the president to concede? maria, that word is not even in our vocabulary right now. knew trump was going to lose legitimately, and that he did lose legitimately. admissions they were forced to make under oath. i was in the oval office, and at some point in the conversation, the lead data person was brought on, and i remember he delivered to the president pretty blunt terms that he was going to lose. trump campaign attorneys followed up on all of the fraud claims, and they quickly concluded that fraud did not take the election from donald trump. voters did. the news was told to trump s chief of staff at the white house, mark meadows in mid to late november. i remember a call with mr.
masters, and mehmet oz. all of them lost. of the ten republicans in the house of representatives who voted to impeach trump because of january 6th, only two returned to congress in 2023. the others either declined to run for reelection, such as adam kinzinger or lost their republican primary reelection battles to more trump-supporting candidates such as liz cheney. this mission that you ve taken on has cost you your job. do you have any regrets? our obligation, my obligation very much is above politics. i can t imagine having done anything differently at any stage of this process since january 6th. it saddens me that so many of my republican colleagues have not met the moment. kinzinger and cheney were the only two republicans on the house select committee to investigate the attack on january 6th. they ve become pariahs in a
election he falsely claimed had been stolen. trump thought the justice department was an arm of his presidency and a way for him to tell them what to do and they should do his bidding and what he wanted. as the new targets of trump s ire, rosen and donohue fielded near daily complaints from donald trump. between december 23rd and january 3rd, the president either called me or met with me virtually ever day. the common element of all of this was the president expressing his dissatisfaction that the justice department in his view had not done enough to investigate election fraud. but they were investigating. the department of justice had been debunking trump s wild election fraud lies one by one. but president trump chose to not listen. on a december 27th phone call with rosen and donohue, president trump said the department had an obligation to
like this. trump probably put more pressure on brad raffensperger than anyone else. it was immense. all i want to do is this, i just want to find 11,780 votes. and i think it s the phone call that everyone remembers that was later leaked, where he in turn berated brad raffensperger. they re going around playing you and laughing at you behind your back, brad. he praised him. he seemed to try to charm him at times, and even indicated that if he did not act, that there could be criminal liability for those actions. you re not reporting it. that s a criminal that s a criminal offense. and it was not just pressure. there were threats, usually from trump supporters who felt empowered or incited by him. take for instance the two men in this hummer with a qanon decal. prosecutors say they drove the