A nice summary:
https://www.news.com...5d404a65f1948e9
Donald Trump’s 77 day campaign to subvert presidential election
In the weeks between the presidential election and the US riots, Donald Trump ‘risked disorder, chaos and violence’ in his bid to ‘subvert American democracy’.
Natalie Brown
FEBRUARY 7, 20216:35PM
NEWS.COM.AU2:32
Donald Trump isn't going anywhere, impeachment or not
Enabled by prominent Republicans and motivated by his most devout followers, Donald Trump spent the 77 days between November’s presidential election and the deadly Capitol insurrection on January 6 peddling a lie about voter fraud invented to help him subvert American democracy.
A lengthy report by The New York Times this week retold the events of the weeks between the two milestones of the 74-year-old’s administration, describing how he “waged an extralegal campaign that convinced tens of millions of Americans the election had been stolen and made the deadly January 6 assault on the Capitol almost inevitable”.
While we may not have been able to “foresee” the specific events that occurred at the Capitol, we could – and did – foresee that Mr Trump’s rhetoric and behaviour was a red flag, Dr William Clapton, a senior lecturer in international relations at UNSW, told news.com.au.
Even before November 4 – when, in the early hours of the morning, Mr Trump called for “all voting to stop” in what he deemed “a fraud on the American public” – he and his officials were preparing to lay the “first stone of his post-election lie”.
“Trump’s attacks on mail-in ballots was, for some, a deliberate strategy,” Dr Clapton said.
“He and his officials knew that the COVID-19 pandemic would prompt many to vote by mail, and that these voters would predominantly vote Democrat. They knew that Republicans would turn out in greater numbers on election day … When the mail-in ballots were counted, they knew they could probably overwhelmingly favour Biden and the Democrats.
“And this was his opportunity to claim fraud. Trump and his supporters repeatedly questioned how so many votes for Biden could ‘magically appear’.
“From this perspective, this makes Trump and his supporters actions even more terrible and indefensible, in my view.”
Within 10 days of November 3, Mr Trump’s election lawyers knew, according to The Times, that there was no reality to the narrative their leader was promoting in his comments and on Twitter.
Supposedly “dead voters” were turning up alive. A suitcase of what Republicans claimed was filled with “illegal ballots” turned out to be camera equipment.
“Mr Trump did not, could not, win the election, not by ‘a lot’ or even a little,” the Times’ report said. “His presidency would soon be over.”
And yet, the lie prevailed.
“Whether Trump’s lawyers would have let him make claims about the election results, I am not sure they could have stopped him even if they wanted to,” Dr Clapton said, adding there’d been reports of “major schisms” among Mr Trump’s legal team after the election.
“On one side were those pushing a strategy that engaged in serious attempts to appeal against specific aspects of the electoral process in some states.
“On the other side was Rudy Giuliani and others who wanted to push the narrative that the election was stolen, and engage in spurious and unfounded lawsuits based on this. The Giuliani camp won out.”
As for key Republican officials – including then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell – “I am not sure if they saw it going that far, but if they didn’t, they should have”, Dr Clapton said.
Mr Trump’s greatest enablers in the aftermath of his election loss, motivated by “ambition, fear or a misplaced belief that he would not go too far”.
“They must have known they were playing with fire, that there were elements among Trump supporters who had the intent and capability to engage in violent acts in response to the lies that Trump and Republicans repeatedly spread about the election,” Dr Clapton said of Mr Trump’s team, Republican supporters in Congress and media allies.
The day after the Electoral College certified the votes as expected in December, Mr McConnell “moved to bring the curtain down”, telling Mr Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows he would acknowledge Joe Biden as president-elect on the Senate floor that afternoon.
Still, Mr Trump refused to concede. “This fake election can no longer stand,” he wrote on Twitter. “Get moving Republicans.”
We all know what happened next.
In hindsight, both The Times report and Dr Clapton concluded that the events of January 6 didn’t come out of nowhere.
Much of last year, Dr Clapton said, was spent by a president who “repeatedly and consistently attacking and undermining the integrity of the US elections well before the elections were held”.
“At best, Trump, his team, his Republican supporters in congress … and his media allies … were grossly negligent. They engaged in conduct that posed an unacceptable risk of violence and endangered US national security,” he said.
“At worst, they deliberately and cynically lied and manipulated Trump supporters in an attempt to further their own political ambitions. They deliberately tried to overturn and steal a legitimate election, ironically and hypocritically by using the false pretence of an attempt by the Democrats to steal the election.
“Either way, judging by the conduct of Trump and many Republican members of Congress in the aftermath of the riots at the Capitol, they seem not to care at all about the lives lost or the serious damage done to US democracy.”
"Fortune favors the bold, though statistics favor the cautious." - Indomitable Courteous (Icy) Fist, The Palace Job - Patrick Weekes
"Well well well ... if it ain't The Invisible C**t." - Billy Butcher, The Boys
"I have strong views about not tempting providence and, as a wise man once said, the difference between luck and a wheelbarrow is, luck doesn’t work if you push it." - Colonel Orhan, Sixteen Ways to Defend a Walled City - KJ Parker