A new report provides more detail on how top officials in then-President Donald Trump’s administration relied on the lowest dregs of the internet fever swamps following Trump’s 2020 defeat as they tried to use the federal government to leverage false conspiracy theories about voter fraud and nullify the results.
Trump himself had long consumed far-right media content, and after the election he promoted a bevy of fantastical lies from Fox News, OAN, Newsmax, and others purportedly providing evidence that the election had been stolen from him. His paranoid rants put American democracy at risk, and ultimately helped spur the January 6 riots aimed at preventing the certification of Joe Biden’s victory at the U.S. Capitol.
Trump had help, as a Saturday New York Times report based on emails reviewed by the paper makes clear. In a January 1 email, Mark Meadows, Trump’s chief of staff, asked Jeffrey A. Rosen, then the acting attorney general, to examine “Italygate,” the conspiracy theory that “people in Italy had used military technology and satellites to remotely tamper with voting machines in the United States and switch votes for Mr. Trump to votes for Joseph R. Biden Jr.,” according to the account.
The Times reported that Meadows’ request “violated longstanding guidelines that essentially forbid almost all White House personnel, including the chief of staff, from contacting the Justice Department about investigations or other enforcement actions.”
On what basis was Meadows willing to breach those restrictions? The Times further reported: