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A GOP operative said Trump campaigning in Georgia would be the ‘worst thing that can happen’ for Republicans like Herschel Walker, report says

Former President Donald Trump listens as Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker speaks during his Save America rally in Perry, Ga., on Saturday, Sept. 25, 2021.Ben Gray/Associated Press

  • Former President Donald Trump has recently held rallies to boost GOP candidates in several states.

  • Trump has not recently been to Georgia, despite his endorsed candidate Herschel Walker’s tight race.

  • A GOP operative told The Washington Post that Trump could distract from GOP messaging.

As many Republican candidates relish the support they receive from former President Donald Trump, some in the party are seeking to keep their distance, afraid he could derail messaging aimed at the Democrats.

One unnamed GOP operative in Georgia told The Washington Post some Republicans in the state think it would be bad for their candidates if the former president came through.

“Trump coming down to Georgia is the worst thing that can happen for Republican candidates down here,” the operative told the Post. “It immediately turns the focus from inflation and immigration to Donald Trump, and Donald Trump lost the last election here.”

The operative also noted the competitiveness of the Senate race, in which Trump-endorsed Republican Herschel Walker is looking to unseat Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock in a closely watched race that could impact which party ends up with a majority in the chamber.

“We have a pretty tight window to get Hershel across the finish line on election night, and Trump would undermine that,” the operative told the Post.

Previous reports have said some Republicans want the focus of the midterms to remain on the Democrats and President Joe Biden, rather than Trump or the 2020 election, with some even worrying about what could happen if Trump announced a 2024 campaign before election day.

The Georgia race, considered one of the tightest in the country, has been called a toss-up by some experts, while poll averaging site FiveThirtyEight gives Warnock a slight edge.

But Trump, who has long bragged about the value of his endorsement and appearances on the campaign trail, has not returned to Georgia in more than six months — despite a report in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in September that said he was considering returning after the Walker-Warnock debate.

Meanwhile, he has continued to hold rallies alongside Republican candidates vying for a win in November in other states.

The former president was in Arizona earlier this month campaigning alongside Kari Lake, who is in a tight contest for Arizona governor, and Senate candidate Blake Masters, whose crucial race is also considered a toss-up by experts. Trump also appeared this month at a rally in Nevada, which also has an important Senate race, and just this weekend he was in Texas, which does not have a competitive Senate race on the ballot.

Still, Trump hasn’t been to Georgia since March, even as Walker has struggled to deal with an abortion scandal. Three sources close to the situation told the Post that Walker’s campaign talked to Trump’s team about the former president potentially coming, but the suggested rally never happened.

Sources told the Post Trump may do several additional rallies before election day, including in Georgia, but only where he is wanted.

“We aren’t going anywhere we are told they don’t want us,” an unnamed Trump adviser told the outlet. “If you’re trying to drive out independents and suburban moderate women, he’s probably not your best option.”

Trump’s office did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

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Meadows texts reveal direct White House communications with pro-Trump operative behind plans to seize voting machines

In relaying the news to Meadows, Waldron said the decision would allow opponents to engage in “delay tactics” preventing Waldron and his associates from immediately accessing machines. Waldron also characterized Arizona as “our lead domino we were counting on to start the cascade,” referring to similar efforts in other states like Georgia.

“Pathetic,” Meadows responded.

The messages, which have not been previously reported, shed new light on how Waldron’s reach extended into the highest levels of the White House and the extent to which Meadows was kept abreast of plans for accessing voting machines, a topic sources tell CNN, and court documents suggest, is of particular interest to state and federal prosecutors probing efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

The messages also provide an early window into how an effort to gain access to voting machines through the courts and state legislatures morphed into a more clandestine endeavor that is now the subject of multiple criminal investigations. Despite attempts to distance himself from the more dubious attempts to keep Trump in office, the messages underscore how Meadows was an active participant, engaging with someone who former White House officials have described as a fringe outsider peddling outlandish ideas.
Waldron, a retired Army colonel with ties to Trump’s one-time national security adviser Michael Flynn, has emerged as a key figure in the broader scheme to overturn the election and was the architect of several extreme proposals for doing so. That includes sending Meadows a PowerPoint presentation outlining a plan for overturning the election, which was later used to brief Republican lawmakers, titled, in part: “Options for 6 Jan.”
Waldron also helped draft language for an executive order directing the Pentagon and Department of Homeland Security to seize voting machines on behalf of the White House.

Trump never signed the order, siding with White House lawyers who insisted the idea was legally perilous. But there is evidence that his closest allies, including Meadows, continued to entertain similar pitches from Waldron in the lead-up to January 6 as they sought to validate conspiracy theories about foreign election interference.

Criminal prosecutors in Georgia are demanding Waldron and Meadows testify as part of ongoing grand jury investigation into efforts to overturn the 2020 election results there. Waldron is also engaged in a months-long legal fight with the January 6 Committee, which has subpoenaed his cellphone data. Meadows recently complied with a Justice Department subpoena to hand over information pertaining to the 2020 election including these text messages.

Recent subpoenas from the Justice Department related to the same probe indicate investigators are seeking information about claims of election fraud and efforts to persuade government officials to “change or affect” the election results, “or delay certification of the results,” according to one subpoena obtained by CNN, exactly the kinds of activities Waldron is known to have engaged in.

Waldron and his attorneys did not respond to several requests for comment. Meadows’ attorney also did not respond to CNN’s request for comment.

‘Chasing election machines for years’

Before he retired from the Army as a colonel in 2017, Waldron specialized in psychological operations and worked alongside Michael Flynn at the Defense Intelligence Agency, according to his military records.

In numerous interviews, people familiar with Waldron’s background tell CNN that for years he has been obsessed with the idea that US voting machines are vulnerable to foreign hacking. “Waldron had been chasing election machines for years,” said one former US official with knowledge of his efforts.

It wasn’t until Trump started falsely claiming that the election had been stolen from him that Waldron had a chance to put his theories to use. Trump’s inner circle was warned by several Republican lawmakers that without evidence of fraud, their plan to subvert the Electoral College would almost certainly fail, text messages obtained by the House Select Committee investigating the US Capitol attack show.

In the days after the election, Waldron quickly emerged as one of the Trump legal team’s favorite “expert witnesses” on election fraud. He was a near constant presence during Giuliani’s road show in the weeks after the election when he and his team of Trump lawyers traveled around the country to convince state officials that the outcome had been tainted by widespread voter fraud.

During one December 2020 hearing in Georgia, Waldron appeared alongside Giuliani and conservative attorney John Eastman, where he pushed unfounded claims about Dominion voting machines and similarly alleged that fraudulent ballots had tainted the election results.

Those familiar with his role in the effort also described Waldron as being in charge of “operational planning” and working directly with Rudy Giuliani on gaining access to voting systems in states where Trump lost.

“Waldron was responsible for planning and overseeing execution” of efforts to access voting systems,” said one of those sources.

That was especially true in Antrim County, Michigan, where Waldron and his team of pro-Trump operatives gained access to voting systems there in late 2020 — producing a since-debunked report based on their findings that Trump repeatedly held-up as proof of election fraud even after it was dismissed by his own top advisers.

The Antrim County breach is now the subject of a criminal investigation by authorities in Michigan. Among those under investigation are Matthew DePerno, the Republican nominee to become Michigan’s attorney general, and a number of people Waldron worked with after the 2020 election, including Doug Logan, the CEO of Cyber Ninjas.

Arizona audit

As Trump’s lawyers worked to enlist sympathetic state and local officials to help keep Trump in office, Waldron often served as a key liaison, according to emails and text messages obtained by the group American Oversight and shared with CNN. That was particularly true in Arizona, where Waldron was in direct communication with a number of GOP state officials and lawmakers about producing evidence of fraud.

In the weeks before his December 23 text to Meadows, Waldron exchanged nearly a dozen emails with state GOP officials in Arizona, discussing various plans for gaining access to voting systems or ballots from certain counties and pitching himself to analyze the election data for evidence of fraud, according to the documents reviewed by CNN.
On December 11, Waldron sent an email to three Arizona state GOP lawmakers who were pushing to overturn the election, suggesting a member of his team could “take a hard drive” to county elections offices, upload relevant voter data and “get the files to us.”

“This would be the fastest and most transparent way to give you the direct evidence you need to either pursue or close the issue,” he wrote, referring to ongoing efforts to upend the election results in Arizona.

“We are happy to consult with you to answer questions or coordinate a ‘way ahead,'” Waldron added.

Two days later, Waldron’s attorney and business associate, Charles Bundren, sent one of those same Arizona lawmakers draft language for subpoenas seeking electronically stored voting information. The document is nearly identical to subpoenas Arizona state Republicans ultimately filed demanding election officials hand over voting machines, emails obtained by the group American Oversight and provided to CNN show.

After an Arizona judge ultimately rejected those subpoenas on December 23, Waldron reached out to Meadows about the decision, according to the newly revealed text messages.

Waldron texted Meadows again on December 28, 2020, suggesting a member of his team had analyzed election data from “several counties” and pointing to two specific examples of what he called the “Southern steal” — an apparent reference to voting irregularities that, he alleged, had changed the election outcome in those localities.

“OK,” Meadows responded, acknowledging Waldron’s message.

Ongoing efforts

It remains unclear if there are additional texts between Waldron and Meadows beyond the messages exchanged on December 23 and December 28, in part because both men have sought to block the January 6 committee from obtaining their cellphone data.

Over the past year, Trump allies have continued to push baseless claims about widespread fraud and sought access to voting systems in various states. Waldron has remained a central figure in that effort.

Emails obtained by CNN connect Waldron directly to the 2021 partisan audit in Maricopa County, Arizona. After his work in Antrim County, Michigan, Waldron pushed GOP state officials in Arizona to hire his team to conduct the audit. But Arizona officials expressed concerns after Waldron’s Antrim County report was thoroughly debunked.
Instead, with Waldron’s endorsement, they hired Cyber Ninjas to conduct the Maricopa audit, which ultimately proved that Biden won the county. Waldron remained heavily involved, emails obtained by CNN show. It’s unclear whether Waldron was paid for his work as Arizona Republicans have fought to keep that information from coming out publicly. Emails have emerged that show contractors connected to Waldron were paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by America Voting Rights Foundation, a Trump-affiliated PAC created last summer.

Over the past year, Waldron was also listed as a key participant for a series of “election integrity” planning sessions involving other notable Trump allies like Flynn and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell.

Lindell and another known associate of Waldron, Conan Hayes, are subjects of a separate FBI investigation focused on an election system breach in Colorado.

In April, Waldron sued the House January 6 committee to block their efforts to obtain his cellphone data. Waldron’s own lawyer, Charles Bundren, has taken steps to shield his own communications from the committee.

Court documents show that Bundren stepped aside as Waldron’s primary attorney in the case against the committee last month and joined the lawsuit as a co-plaintiff, arguing the panel is seeking cellphone data that could expose the breadth of his own contacts with others involved in efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

Bundren did not respond to several requests for comment.

CNN’s Jamie Gangel contributed to this report.

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Trump campaign operative Roman delivered false elector lists to Capitol Hill on Jan. 6: report

A former Trump campaign operative delivered lists of false electors on Jan. 6, 2021, to Capitol Hill in an effort to get them to former Vice President Mike Pence who was presiding over the Senate that day, two people familiar with the matter told Politico.

The sources told Politico Friday that Mike Roman, who served as Trump’s director of Election Day operations in 2020, delivered fake election certificates to Rep. Mike Kelly’s (R-Pa.) chief of staff at the time.

The two people told Politico that the chief of staff deputized a colleague to share copies of the lists around the Capitol after receiving them from Roman. 

Roman did not respond to multiple requests for comment from Politico.

Roman did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Hill.

The House select committee investigating the Capitol insurrection previously revealed text messages that show Sean Riley, an aide to Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.), reached out to a Pence aide to arrange a handoff of fake election certificates for Michigan and Wisconsin. 

Johnson told reporters after the committee revealed his aide’s involvement that he was “basically unaware” of the communication and that his office received the slate of electors from Kelly’s office.

He said his chief of staff did the “right thing” by contacting the vice president’s office about the list and that Pence’s team declined the electors.

“My chief of staff contacted the vice president’s staff and said, ‘Do you want this?’ They said ‘no’ and we didn’t deliver it and that’s the end of story,” Johnson said at the time.

Kelly has denied involvement in the effort. 

Kelly and Johnson did not immediately return requests for comment from The Hill. 

A spokesperson for Johnson told Politico that Kelly’s office has changed its story, from denying his involvement entirely to not denying that his then-chief of staff was involved. 

Politico reported on Thursday that Kelly’s office conducted an internal investigation, determining his then-chief of staff was involved but emphasizing that Kelly was not aware of his top aide’s actions. 

Kelly’s current chief of staff, Tim Butler, told Politico in an interview that the former chief of staff received the information, and another staff member physically walked it over. Butler said neither of them still work for Kelly’s office. 

Before the certification of the 2020 election, Trump privately pressed Pence to overturn the results, according to testimony laid out by the House select committee.

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