Trump–Raffensperger phone call

On January 2, 2021, during an hour-long conference call, U.S. President Donald Trump pressured Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to change the state's vote totals from the 2020 presidential election. Trump was defeated by Joe Biden in the election, but refused to accept the outcome[1] and made an unprecedented, months-long effort to overturn the results. Prior to the call to Raffensperger, Trump spoke repeatedly to state and local officials in at least three states, urging them to recount votes, throw out some ballots, or replace the Democratic slate of electors with a Republican slate. Trump's call with Raffensperger was first reported by The Washington Post and other media outlets the day after it took place.[2][3][4]

Brad Raffensperger (left) and Donald Trump (right)

According to the publicly released recording of the call and reports made by multiple news agencies, Trump attempted to pressure the Secretary into "finding him votes," despite being repeatedly told that there was no electoral error. Trump's repeated efforts to convince the Secretary to find some basis to overturn the election results were perceived as pleading and threatening. At one point on the call, Trump told Raffensperger, "What I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than [the 11,779 vote margin of defeat] we have, because we won the state."[5] During the call, Trump falsely suggested that Raffensperger could have committed a criminal offense. Legal experts have suggested that Trump's behavior and demands could have violated state and federal laws.[6]

On January 11, the phone call was cited in a new article of impeachment introduced in the House of Representatives.[7]

Background

In the 2020 United States presidential election, former Vice President Joe Biden defeated incumbent President Donald Trump, in part through a narrow victory over Trump in the state of Georgia. Nevertheless, Trump's campaign continued to claim baseless accounts of voter fraud which have been resoundingly dismissed by fact-checkers, elections-security experts, and courts. Nearly all of Trump's legal challenges to the election results were unsuccessful, but he has repeatedly refused to accept the outcome of the election.[8] Audits were conducted and hand recounts requested, all of which ultimately concluded there was no evidence of widespread voter fraud that would considerably change the results.[9][10] Biden was officially confirmed the winner of Georgia on November 19.[11]

In November and December, as his lawsuits were repeatedly rejected in court for lack of evidence, Trump personally communicated with Republican local and state officials in at least three states: Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Georgia. He talked in person or via phone to state legislators, state attorneys general, and governors, pressuring them to overturn the election results in their states by recounting votes, throwing out some of the ballots, or getting the state legislature to replace the elected Democratic slate of Electoral College members with a Republican slate of electors chosen by the legislature.[12][13] In December he spoke by phone to the governor of Georgia, Brian Kemp, and made public demands on the secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, both Republicans who had supported Trump in the election. He demanded that they reverse the Georgia election results, threatened them with political retaliation when they did not, strongly criticized them in speeches and tweets, and tweeted that Kemp should resign.[14][15]

December 23 phone call with chief elections investigator

On December 23, 2020, Trump called the chief investigator for the Georgia secretary of state’s office, who was then conducting a ballot audit in Cobb County. Raffensperger had ordered the audit in response to allegations of fraud. Trump told the investigator that he or she would be a "national hero" if they could “find the fraud." Some legal experts have said that this phone call appears to be bribery or obstruction on Trump's part. On December 29, the audit ended. The allegations of fraud were determined to be baseless; Trump was unhappy with those results.[16]

Trump's December 23 phone call to the chief investigator was acknowledged by Raffensperger during a Good Morning America interview on January 4.[17] The Washington Post revealed more details of the phone call on January 9, but did not reveal the name of the chief investigator to protect that person's safety.[16]

January 2 taped conversation with Raffensperger

On January 2, 2021, Trump held a one-hour phone call with Raffensperger.[3][18] Trump was joined by chief of staff Mark Meadows, trade adviser Peter Navarro, Justice Department official John Lott Jr., law professor John Eastman, and attorneys Rudy Giuliani, Cleta Mitchell and Kurt Hilbert. Raffensperger was joined by his general counsel Ryan Germany.[19] On January 3, The Washington Post and other media outlets obtained a recording of this phone conversation.[19][20]

During the phone call, Trump maintained falsely that he had won Georgia by "hundreds of thousands of votes", insisting that the certified election results were wrong.[21] He said that Raffensperger should "reevaluate" the election's results, citing a variety of different conspiracy theories regarding voting in the state. Raffensperger, in response, answered that the election results in that state were correct and legitimate, and that Trump "had got his data wrong".[22] During his attempts to pressure Raffensperger into changing the election results, Trump said, "I just want to find 11,780 votes", the number needed to overcome Biden's advantage in Georgia. Trump also tried to intimidate Raffensperger, hinting that Raffensperger and his attorney could face a possible criminal investigation. Trump said, "You know, that's a criminal offense. And you know, you can't let that happen. That's a big risk to you."[23]

After the Georgia call, Trump and his team spoke on Zoom with officials in Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.[24]

Release of the tape

On January 3 Trump said on Twitter that he had spoken to Raffensperger and that Raffensperger was "unwilling or unable to answer questions" about alleged election fraud and that he "has no clue".[25] Later that day, the recording of the conversation was released to the Washington Post and other media outlets; a local television station said they had obtained it from "government sources".[26]

Raffensperger said he had not initially intended to release the tape, but felt compelled to respond after Trump misrepresented the call on Twitter. He added that the call had been hastily arranged after Trump saw Raffensperger say on Fox News that morning that the election had been fair and honest and that Trump had lost.[26] It was later reported that the White House had made 18 previous attempts over the previous weeks to get the secretary of state's office on the phone. Raffensperger said he had preferred not to take such calls because his office was in "litigation mode" with the White House, and both sides would need to have their advisers present.[20]

Investigation

Legal experts said Trump's attempt to pressure Raffensperger could have violated election law,[1] including federal and state laws against soliciting election fraud or interference in elections.[24][27] Election-law scholar Edward B. Foley called Trump's conduct "inappropriate and contemptible" while the executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington called Trump's attempt "to rig a presidential election ... a low point in American history and unquestionably impeachable conduct."[28]

According to The Guardian, Trump might have committed a crime by attempting to pressure the secretary of state, as he might have been "knowingly attempting to coerce state officials into corrupting the integrity of the election", said professor of Constitutional Law Richard Pildes.[23][29][30] According to Michael Bromwich, Trump might have violated Title 52 of the United States Code when he said "I just want to find 11,780 votes", as reported in The Guardian.[23][31][32] NBC has said the call from Trump to the secretary of state could warrant an investigation into possible conflicts of interest.[33]

Federal

On January 4, Democratic congressional leaders, believing Trump "engaged in solicitation of, or conspiracy to commit, a number of election crimes", requested the FBI to investigate the incident.[34] In addition, while some House Republicans tried to defend Trump's Georgia call, Democrats began drafting a censure resolution.[35] After the 2021 storming of the Capitol, Democrats launched a drive to impeach Trump for "Incitement of Insurrection". The draft article of impeachment cited the January 2 phone call to Raffensperger as a "prior effort to subvert and obstruct the certification of the results of the 2020 presidential election".[36]

State

The Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis said on Monday that she found the phone call with Trump and Raffensperger "disturbing" and said a Democratic appointee from the State Election Board had requested the Secretary's Elections Division to investigate the call, after which the Board would refer the case to the office and the state Attorney General.[37] Once the investigation is complete, the case will be referred to the district attorney's office.[38]

Some commentators raised legal concerns regarding Raffensperger recording and disclosing his phone call with Trump; right-wing media such as Gateway Pundit specifically wrote that Raffensperger might face an espionage charge. PolitiFact cited legal experts that the content of the phone call was not covered by the Espionage Act, as the conversation had nothing to do with national security.[39]

While there were rumors about a possible lawsuit against Raffensperger for recording the conversation without Trump's consent, the telephone call recording laws for both locations where this conversation was held, namely the state of Georgia and District of Columbia, only require "one-party consent", meaning any partcipant of a phone call can legally record it without another party's consent.[40][41][42] As the conversation was hastily arranged, Raffensperger said that the parties did not establish any non-disclosure agreement before or during the phone call.[25]

Reactions

The day after the Trump call was disclosed, Republican Georgia voting system implementation manager Gabriel Sterling sharply refuted Trump's claims of election fraud during a press conference with Raffensperger, listing and debunking several allegations made by Trump and his allies that thousands of teenagers, dead people, and unregistered citizens had voted, and a misleading video that had been distributed supposedly showing fake ballots being secretly retrieved from suitcases. Sterling said, "The president's legal team had the entire tape, they watched the entire tape, and from our point of view, intentionally misled the state's senate, voters and the people of the United States about this. It was intentional. It was obvious. And anybody watching this knows that."[43][44]

Carl Bernstein, one of the investigative journalists who revealed the Watergate scandal, said the allegations were "far worse than Watergate" and called the recording of the phone call "the ultimate smoking gun tape".[45] U.S. Representative Hank Johnson has called it "a violation of state and federal law", while Senator Dick Durbin has said it "merits nothing less than a criminal investigation."[46] House Democrats were reported to be drafting a censure resolution.[35] The Washington Post called it "extraordinary" that a sitting U.S. president would attempt to pressure a Secretary of a U.S. state into changing the votes of a state.[22] David Worley, the Democratic appointee to the State Elections Board and a former Democratic Party of Georgia chairman, called for a criminal probe into Trump's actions, stating that Trump had solicited election fraud, constituting a violation of state law.[47]

Democrats condemned Trump's conduct.[1] Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, as well as Representative Adam Schiff (the chief prosecutor at Trump's first impeachment trial) said that Trump's attempt to pressure Raffensperger was an abuse of power.[1][28] Dick Durbin, the second highest-ranking Democrat in the Senate, called for a criminal investigation.[1] On January 4, 2021, Democratic U.S. Representatives Ted Lieu and Kathleen Rice sent a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray asking him to open a criminal investigation of the incident, writing that they believed Trump had solicited, or conspired to commit, "a number of election crimes."[34] More than 90 House Democrats support a formal censure resolution, introduced by Representative Hank Johnson of Georgia, to "censure and condemn" Trump for having "misused the power of his office by threatening an elected official with vague criminal consequences if he failed to pursue the president’s false claims" and for attempting "to willfully deprive the citizens of Georgia of a fair and impartial election process in direct contravention" of state and federal law.[48][35] Some congressional Democrats called Trump's conduct an impeachable offense.[49]

Several House and Senate Republicans also condemned Trump's conduct,[1][50] although no Republican described the conduct as criminal or an impeachable offense.[50] Republican Senator Pat Toomey called it a "new low in this whole futile and sorry episode" and commended "Republican election officials across the country who have discharged their duties with integrity over the past two months while weathering relentless pressure, disinformation, and attacks from the president and his campaign."[50] Other congressional Republicans defended Trump's Georgia call, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy[35] and Georgia Senator David Perdue, who told Fox News in an interview that he thinks releasing the tape of the call was "disgusting."[51]

Raffensperger tweeted that "the truth will come out" regarding the incident.[52] On January 4, Raffensperger confirmed the phone conversation during an interview which aired on Good Morning America. He said, "I’m not a lawyer. All I know is that we’re going to follow the law, follow the process. Truth matters. And we’ve been fighting these rumors for the last two months."[53]

See also

References

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Full audio sources of the call

Official responses

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