Former President Donald Trump was issued a subpoena Friday by the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot on the U.S. Capitol.
The committee, which voted unanimously on the move, is demanding Trump’s testimony under oath next month in addition to records relevant to the probe into the attack, which the panel noted got here after weeks of him denying losing the 2020 election to President Joe Biden.
The panel had said on Oct. 13 that it could subpoena Trump, whose supporters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as a joint session of Congress met to verify Biden’s victory.
“We recognize that a subpoena to a former President is a big and historic motion,” the panel’s leaders wrote Trump in a letter Friday.
“We don’t take this motion flippantly.”
Committee Chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., and Vice Chairwoman Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., within the letter cited what they called Trump’s central role in a deliberate, “multi-part effort” to reverse his loss within the 2020 presidential election and to stay in power.
The subpoena says that Trump can be deposed on Nov. 14, after the midterm elections.
It shouldn’t be clear whether Trump will comply with the subpoena.
“As with all similar matter, we are going to review and analyze it, and can respond as appropriate to this unprecedented motion,” said David A. Warrington, a partner at Dhillon Law Group, the firm representing Trump within the subpoena matter. In an announcement sent by a Trump spokesman to NBC News, Warrington also accused the committee of “flouting norms” by publicly releasing the subpoena.
The records being sought by the House committee pursuant to the subpoena are due Nov. 4.
The records include documentation of telephone calls, text messages, or communications sent through the encrypted messaging app Signal, in addition to photos, videos and handwritten notes relevant to the scope of the probe.
Pro-Trump protesters storm the U.S. Capitol to contest the certification of the 2020 U.S. presidential election results by the U.S. Congress, on the U.S. Capitol Constructing in Washington, D.C., U.S. January 6, 2021.
Ahmed Gaber | Reuters
The panel specifically asked for communications to, and memorandums from, 13 Trump allies and fellow deniers of Biden’s victory, amongst them former Recent York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Republican gadfly Roger Stone, retired Army Lt. General Michael Flynn, and former White House aide Stephen Bannon.
Bannon was sentenced to 4 months in jail earlier Friday for refusing to comply with subpoenas from the identical committee. He stays free pending appeal.
Of their letter to Trump, committee leaders Thompson and Cheney accused him of “maliciously” making false allegations of election fraud, “attempting to deprave the Department of Justice” to endorse those claims, pressuring state officials to vary election results, and overseeing efforts to submit false electors to the Electoral College.
The letter also noted that he had pressured his vp, Mike Pence, to refuse to count Electoral College votes throughout the joint session of Congress.
“As demonstrated in our hearings, we have now assembled overwhelming evidence, including from dozens of your former appointees and staff, that you simply personally orchestrated and oversaw a multi-part effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election and to obstruct the peaceful transition of power,” the letter said.
“You were at the middle of the primary and only effort by any U.S. President to overturn an election and obstruct the peaceful transition of power, ultimately culminating in a bloody attack on our own Capitol and on the Congress itself,” the letter said.
The committee’s leaders pointed to the incontrovertible fact that seven presidents had testified to Congress after leaving office, most recently Gerald Ford, a Republican.
And at the very least two presidents, Ford and Abraham Lincoln, testified before Congress while serving within the White House, the letter noted.