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Reading: Legal Effort Expands to Disqualify Republicans as ‘Insurrectionists’
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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Politics > Legal Effort Expands to Disqualify Republicans as ‘Insurrectionists’
Legal Effort Expands to Disqualify Republicans as ‘Insurrectionists’
Politics

Legal Effort Expands to Disqualify Republicans as ‘Insurrectionists’

Last updated: April 7, 2022 7:47 pm
Editorial Board Published April 7, 2022
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The lawyers bringing the new suits believe they have a stronger case to show that the elected officials in question are insurrectionists.

In the run-up to Jan. 6, Mr. Gosar and Mr. Biggs repeatedly posted the falsehood that Mr. Trump had won the election. Mr. Gosar organized some of the earliest rallies to “Stop the Steal,” the movement to keep Mr. Trump in office, coordinating with Ali Alexander, a far-right activist, and with Mr. Finchem.

Capitol Riot’s Aftermath: New Developments


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The effort to disqualify “insurrectionists.” New lawsuits were filed against three Arizona officials, including Representatives Paul Gosar and Andy Biggs, to bar them from office under the 14th Amendment. This is part of a larger legal effort to disqualify G.O.P. lawmakers from re-election if they participated in events surrounding the Jan. 6 attack.

Contempt charges. The House voted to recommend criminal contempt of Congress charges against Peter Navarro and Dan Scavino Jr., two close allies of former President Donald J. Trump, after the pair defied subpoenas from the special committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack.

Ivanka Trump testifies. The former president’s daughter, who served as one of his senior advisers, testified for about eight hours before the Jan. 6 House committee. On the day of the riot, Ms. Trump was in the West Wing. She is said to have tried to persuade her father to call off the rioters.

Justice Department widens inquiry. Federal prosecutors are said to have substantially widened their Jan. 6 investigation to examine the possible culpability of a broad range of pro-Trump figures involved in efforts to overturn the election. The investigation was initially focused on the rioters who had entered the Capitol.

On Dec. 22, 2020, Mr. Gosar and Mr. Biggs met with Mr. Trump and announced they were working to prevent the “disenfranchisement” of Trump voters.

“This sedition will be stopped,” Mr. Gosar wrote on Twitter.

Mr. Finchem attended the rally at the Ellipse on Jan. 6 that in many ways launched the attack on the Capitol. He said he was in Washington to provide evidence to Vice President Mike Pence of what he called fraud in the Arizona election. Mr. Finchem then joined protesters who marched to the Capitol and eventually breached it, though he did not enter the building.

And during the storming of the Capitol, Mr. Gosar used the social media site Parler, which is favored by the far right, to post an image of rioters scaling the building’s walls, writing, “Americans are upset.” As the riot raged, Mr. Gosar and Mr. Biggs led the effort to contest their state’s electors for Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Mr. Gosar would later say that Ashli Babbitt, the rioter shot by the police just outside the House chamber, had been “executed” and that investigating Jan. 6 was “harassing peaceful patriots.”

The suits say that their actions, “taken in concert with others,” establish that they “engaged in the insurrection of Jan. 6” and are “therefore constitutionally disqualified from running for congressional office, under the disqualification clause.”

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TAGGED:Biggs, Andy (1958- )Finchem, Mark WFourteenth Amendment (US Constitution)Gosar, Paul (1958- )Presidential Election of 2020Project: DemocracyStorming of the US Capitol (Jan, 2021)The Washington MailTreason and SeditionUnited States Politics and Government
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