published
A presidential decree drafted in November 2020 shows the extreme measures Donald Trump was willing to take following the election defeat.
-
In a presidential decree, the Trump camp is said to have demanded that all voting machines in the country be confiscated.
-
However, this order was never signed.
-
Donald Trump never acknowledged his election defeat to Joe Biden.
Following Donald Trump’s election defeat in November 2020, the White House reportedly drafted a presidential decree ordering the top US military officer to seize all voting machines in the country. The document issued by the National Archives was never signed, the reported News portal «Politico» on Friday. It shows the extreme measures Trump was willing to take to remain in power despite his defeat in the presidential election.
“With immediate effect, the Ministry of Defense must seize, collect, secure and analyze all machinery, equipment, electronically stored information” regarding the election,” says Politico in the three-page document, which is one of the more than 750 documents submitted to the House of Representatives Committee investigating the storming of the US Capitol.
defeat in the Supreme Court
The draft order, dated December 16, 2020, also provides for the appointment of a public prosecutor who should bring charges once morest any allegation of fraud in connection with the confiscated voting machines. The measure is justified with a number of conspiracy theories – which have been refuted several times – according to which the voting machines had been manipulated. It is unclear who wrote the draft.
Trump is still spreading the unsupported claim that massive election fraud robbed him of a second term. He took legal action once morest the release of the documents. He suffered a clear legal defeat in the Supreme Court this week.
The documents include, among other things, memos to his staff, emails and lists of people who visited or called him on January 6, 2021, and notes made during those conversations. Among other things, the investigative committee wants to use the documents to uncover the exact background to the attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021.
(AFP/chk)