Child Groomer, Sexual Predator
1,208 posts
I suspect Donoghue’s name is probably not familiar to much of the public, but given his unique perspective and experiences with Donald Trump, it’s a good thing federal investigators sought him out.
In December 2020, for example, Trump pressed the Justice Department’s top two officials on voter-fraud claims
they knew to be false. The officials — Donoghue and acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen — responded by telling the then-president that they could not help him change the election’s outcome.
Trump said he was asking for something slightly different. “Just say that the election was corrupt [and] leave the rest to me” and to the White House’s GOP allies in Congress
the then-president said, according to Donoghue’s
written notes.
As we’ve
discussed, it was striking evidence that Trump effectively asked Justice Department officials to lie, at which point some congressional Republicans would advance the rest of the scheme to overturn the results.
But that’s not the only area of interest. In the immediate aftermath of his election defeat, Trump said election workers in Atlanta corrupted the vote tallies by taking improper ballots from suitcases.
The claims were immediately discredited by, among others, his own Justice Department:
It was Donoghuewho told the outgoing president directly that the matter had been reviewed by federal law enforcement and the accusations were baseless.
After one conversation in which the then-president referenced an imagined suitcase filled with fraudulent ballots, Donoghue told Trump, “No, sir, there is no suitcase. You can watch that video over and over. There is no suitcase. There is a wheeled bin where they carried the ballots. And that’s just how they moved ballots around that facility.
There’s nothing suspicious about that at all.”
But wait, there’s more. In the post-election period, Trump considered a plan in which he’d fire Rosen, the then-acting attorney general, and replace him with Jeffrey Clark as part of a scheme to ramp up the Justice Department’s anti-election efforts.
The then-president was prepared to do this because Clark, unlike Rosen, was telling Trump what he wanted to hear about keeping him in power, despite his defeat.
Indeed, Clark
sketched out a map for Republican legislators to follow as part of a partisan plot, even as he
quietly pressedTrump to put him in charge of the Justice Department.
Trump ultimately backed away from the plan to make Clark the acting A.G., not because the plan was stark raving mad — though it certainly was — but because the Justice Department’s senior leadership, including Donoghue, team threatened to resign en masse if Rosen was ousted.
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-sho ... -rcna96188