Where Things Stand: Here Are The GOPers Who Asked For Big Lie Pardons

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UNITED STATES - JUNE 30: Reps. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., right, and Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., talk before the House Judiciary Committee hearing titled Secrecy Orders and Prosecuting Leaks: Potential Legislative Responses to Det... UNITED STATES - JUNE 30: Reps. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., right, and Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., talk before the House Judiciary Committee hearing titled Secrecy Orders and Prosecuting Leaks: Potential Legislative Responses to Deter Prosecutorial Abuse of Power, in Rayburn Building on Wednesday, June 30, 2021. (Photo By Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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As promised, the Jan. 6 Committee just aired testimony from former White House lawyer Eric Herschmann, ex-Mark Meadows aide Cassidy Hutchinson and Trump’s director of the White House presidential personnel office, John McEntee — all of whom outlined what they knew about Republican requests for pardons from Trump.

Committee Vice Chair Liz Cheney (R-WY) teased in recent days that the panel would reveal a list of members of Congress who requested pardons, presumably for their roles in helping Trump try to overturn the 2020 election.

The list includes: Reps. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), Mo Brooks (R-AL), Scott Perry (R-PA), Louie Gohmert (R-TX) and Andy Biggs (R-AZ). Reps. Jim Jordan (R-OH) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) both spoke of wanting pardons, but didn’t specifically ask any of the three White House witnesses featured in today’s hearing to make it happen, according to the testimony. Jordan “talked about congressional pardons,” Hutchinson said, but never asked for one. Greene asked the White House counsel’s office for a pardon, Hutchinson said, but didn’t ask Hutchinson specifically for one.

A real shocker: Gaetz was apparently particularly aggressive about his pardon request. Both he and Brooks advocated for a “blanket pardon” for all House members who were at a Dec. 21 Oval Office meeting in which planning for Trump’s election-theft campaign took place. Gaetz even was requesting a pardon in early December, before that infamous meeting — “I’m not sure why,” Hutchinson said of the timing — and the kind of pardon he wanted was “as broad as you could describe,” Herschmann said in the recorded testimony the committee aired today.

“The general tone was, ‘we may get prosecuted because we were defensive of the President’s positions on these things,'” Herschmann said. “The pardon that he (Gaetz) was discussing requesting was as broad as you could describe — from the beginning of time up until today for all things. He mentioned Nixon and I said, ‘Nixon’s pardon was never nearly that broad.'”

McEntee also mentioned in his video testimony that blanket pardons for everyone involved in Jan. 6 events (think, the rally on the Ellipse, election decertification, etc.) were discussed as well. Several of the GOP lawmakers mentioned by witnesses today have already responded, either combatting the information or downplaying the severity of their actions. As Brooks put it: thankfully “no one was persecuted.”

The information about who requested pardons has been long anticipated. It’s as juicy as it is damning, speaking to the intentions of those involved and the level of awareness the crew had about the legality of what they were doing as they attempted to carry out the coup.

As Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) pointedly put it in today’s hearing: “The only reason I know to ask for a pardon is because you think you committed a crime.”

The Best Of TPM Today

Here’s what you should read this evening:

In case you missed our preview this morning: How Trump Tried To Hijack The DOJ Before Jan. 6

Catch up on our live coverage of today’s hearings here: Jan. 6 Hearing: Looking At Trump’s Push To Corrupt The DOJ For Election Steal Plot

The breaking news: Feds Search Home Of Trump DOJ Flunkie Jeff Clark

And the latest from Josh Kovensky: What We Know About The Feds Very Busy Wednesday

Three must-reads from Kate Riga on today’s SCOTUS rulings overturning New York’s concealed carry gun law: SCOTUS Strikes Down New York Gun Control Law, Expanding Gun Rights In Wake Of Mass Shootings

And this: Alito The Troll Makes His Return

And this: Breyer Underscores Lunacy Of Cherry-Picking Historical Evidence To Determine Constitutional Rights

Yesterday’s Most Read Story

Salty Mo Brooks Congratulates Dems After Losing Senate Runoff Post-Trump Snub — Cristina Cabrera

What We Are Reading

Jan. 6 hearings use TV tricks to great effect even as critics call them show biz — David Folkenflik

Steve Bannon Blasts Murdoch, Saying His Media Empire Is Dumping Trump For DeSantis — Mary Papenfuss

Opinion: These two women reminded America why Trump must be prosecuted — Frida Ghitis

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