A day after the riot at the US Capitol, a White House lawyer advised an ally of former President Donald Trump to obtain a defense lawyer in connection with helping the Republican try to overturn the 2020 election results.
"Deputy national security adviser resigns after Wednesday's chaos". politico.com. ^ Collins, Kaitlan; Salama, Vivian; Tapper, Jake; Atwood, Kylie (January 7, 2021). "Trump's deputy national security adviser resigns as other top officials consider quitting over Capitol riot".
(CNN) The orbit of former advisers and associates of President Donald Trump who have been indicted or found guilty grew Thursday when Steve Bannon, his former senior adviser and chief strategist, was arrested and indicted. The crimes they have been accused of are different and stem from a constellation of alleged criminal conspiracies.
^ OGE Director Walter Shaub asks Trump to do more to resolve conflicts of interest. The Brookings Institution. Archived from the original on January 16, 2018. Retrieved January 16, 2018 – via YouTube. ^ Selyukh, Alina (December 30, 2016). "U.S. Ethics Chief Was Behind Those Tweets About Trump, Records Show". NPR.
Anna Cristina Niceta Llo yd "Rickie", White House Social Secretary resigned in protest on the day of the storming of the Capitol. Robert C. O'Brien, National Security Advisor (United States) Chris Liddell, White House Deputy Chief of Staff.
Several Trump appointees, including National Security Advisor Michael Flynn, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus , White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci, and Secretary of Health and Human Services Tom Price have had the shortest service tenures in the history of their respective offices.
After the Capitol storming, dozens of Republicans and staffers loyal to or appointed by President Trump resigned in disgust, even though their terms in office would expire fourteen days later with the inauguration of President Biden. Some senior officials, however, decided against resigning in order to ensure an "orderly transition of power" to the incoming Biden administration, out of concern that Trump would replace them with loyalist lower-level staffers who they feared could carry out illegal orders given by him.
July 19, 2017. Shaub was outspoken with concerns about the Trump Administration during the transition period and after Trump's inauguration. Shaub resigned six months before the end of his term, saying that ethics rules should be tighter. Director of the Office of Personnel Management.
Alex Azar, United States Secretary of Health and Human Services announced his resignation January 15, stating that it was due to the Capitol riots and stressing the need for a peaceful transfer of power.
Became EPA Administrator. Retired. Shaub was outspoken with concerns about the Trump Administration during the transition period and after Trump's inauguration. Shaub resigned six months before the end of his term, saying that ethics rules should be tighter.
Betsy DeVos, United States Secretary of Education also cited the Capitol Hill incident. US Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) criticized DeVos and Chao for resigning rather than voting to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office.
Trump thundered at Sessions. On multiple occasions, Schmidt writes, McGahn prepared his resignation as White House counsel, whose role is to give the president legal advice as it relates to the office of the presidency.
Don McGahn endured screaming matches and badgering calls to advance his pet project: pack courts with conservative judges. The White House counsel, Don McGahn, listens to supreme court nominee Brett Kavanaugh as he testifies before the US Senate judiciary committee on Capitol Hill on 27 September 2018. Photograph: Reuters.
Comey was fired by Trump in May 2017, leading to the appointment of Mueller, one of many dramatic developments in Trump’s first term that Schmidt was in the vanguard of reporting at the time. Schmidt recounts that episode and many others with new details, to dramatic effect, in the book.
Former federal prosecutors: If Trump wasn't president, he would be guilty of obstruction. More than 450 former federal prosecutors signed onto a letter Monday claiming that if Donald Trump was not a sitting president, he would have been found guilty of obstruction of justice from evidence laid out in special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia probe.
Weld was formerly the assistant attorney general for the Criminal Division at the Justice Department.
Attorney General William Barr did not push for obstruction charges against Trump after Mueller submitted his report on the investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election, where he also laid out evidence of obstruction by the president.
Several prominent attorneys signed onto the letter, including Elkan Abramowitz, who is representing American Media Inc. CEO David Pecker. Pecker has in the past supported Trump and AMI has been implicated in a scheme to buy controversial stories involving Trump with the intent of making sure they were not published.
However, Barr has not testified nor submitted the unredacted report, prompting the House committee to begin contempt proceedings against the attorney general as early as Wednesday for his failure to provide the unredacted report.
He resigned with just 13 days left in Trump's presidency. He was joined by Trump’s deputy national security adviser Matt Pottinger and Ryan Tully, the senior director for European and Russian Affairs at the U.S National Security Council.
Although Marcus later conceded to U.S. District Court Judge Paul Diamond that the Trump campaign in fact had "a nonzero number of people in the room," meaning that poll watchers had access, according to the Washington Post.
"Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify," Trump wrote in a tweet that has since been taken down by Twitter before the social media platform froze his account. "USA demands the truth!"
Many political appointees of Donald Trump, the 45th President of the United States, resigned or were dismissed. The record-setting turnover rate in the first year of the Trump Administration has been noted in various publications. Several Trump appointees, including National Security Advisor Michael Flynn, White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, White House Communications Director Ant…
Color key:
Denotes appointees serving in an acting capacity.
Denotes appointees to an office which has since been abolished
Color key:
Denotes appointees serving in an acting capacity.
Denotes appointees to an office which has since been abolished
Dozens of Trump administration officeholders resigned in reaction to the Capitol storming, even though their terms in office would expire fourteen days later with the inauguration of President Biden. Some senior officials, however, decided against resigning in order to ensure an "orderly transition of power" to the incoming Biden administration, out of concern that Trump would replace them with loyalist lower-level staffers who they feared could carry out illegal orders give…
• List of Donald Trump nominees who have withdrawn
• List of short-tenure Donald Trump political appointments
• Brookings Institution: Tracking turnover in the Trump administration
• ABC News: A list of officials who have left the Trump administration