The great capitulation of Trump's voter fraud crusade
The Fix * Analysis
Aaron Blake 17 hrs ago
The 2020 election is a case study in how unproved claims can be weaponized. For decades, former president Donald Trumps party warned of significant voter fraud while successfully pushing policies such as voter ID. In 2016, Trump laid a predicate for contesting an election by suggesting there was massive fraud, even in an election he had won. By 2020, when Trump lost, it culminated in a huge portion of the electorate believing a stolen election theory for which there is vanishingly little actual evidence.
Some have done more than raise questions, though. They, like Trump and often in search of his allies support, have alleged actual massive fraud. But now theyve been asked to account for it. And crucially and increasingly, they have backed down.
The most recent example came Friday night a time routinely used to bury bad news. In a statement, former Trump lawyer Joe diGenova apologized to Christopher Krebs, a Trump administration official who had debunked Trumps fraud claims and whose execution diGenova had endorsed. DiGenova had said Krebs should be drawn and quartered and taken out at dawn and shot.
On November 30, 2020, I appeared on the Howie Carr Show. During the show, I made regrettable statements regarding Christopher Krebs, which many interpreted as a call for violence against him, diGenova said. He added that today I reiterate my public apology to Mr. Krebs and his family for any harm my words caused. Given todays political climate, I should have more carefully expressed my criticism of Mr. Krebs, who was just doing his job.
DiGenovas apology refers to a past apology made on Newsmaxs airwaves, but back then he went even further in downplaying his comments. He maintained at the time that it was a poorly chosen joke and said that he apologized for any misunderstanding of my intentions.
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https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/the-great-capitulation-of-trumps-voter-fraud-crusade/ar-BB1fzFaA