DOJ aims to drop 'politically motivated' lawfare after Trump victory



The Department of Justice has moved to end the legal cases brought against President-elect Donald Trump following his victory on Wednesday.

The DOJ reportedly cannot prosecute a sitting president, requiring the agency to disband any ongoing legal cases against Trump before Inauguration Day. Special counsel Jack Smith is expected to be "gone from his post" before Inauguration Day, meaning the cases will be dropped before January 20.

'I call on Attorney General Garland, Alvin Bragg, and Fani Willis to immediately terminate the politically-motivated prosecutions of President Donald Trump.'

Trump's electoral victory was announced early Wednesday morning after he successfully won North Carolina and flipped Georgia and Pennsylvania. As of this writing, Trump has also flipped Wisconsin and Michigan. Following his victory, prominent Republican voices have called for an end to the lawfare.

In the aftermath of his historic victory, several Republicans called for Trump's criminal cases to be dismissed, arguing that the "American people have spoken."

"The American people have rendered their verdict on President Trump and decisively chosen him to lead the country for the next four years," former Attorney General Bill Barr said in the aftermath of the election. "They did that with full knowledge of the claims against him by prosecutors around the country, and I think Attorney General Garland and the state prosecutors should respect the people’s decision and dismiss the cases against President Trump now."

Trump also received bids of support from members of Republican leadership.

"The American people have spoken: the lawfare must end," House Majority Leader Steve Scalise said in a post on X following Trump's victory. "I call on Attorney General Garland, Alvin Bragg, and Fani Willis to immediately terminate the politically-motivated prosecutions of President Donald Trump."

In the past few years, Trump has been the subject of an onslaught of legal battles. Most recently, Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts in New York and is scheduled to be sentenced on November 26.

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Bill Barr gets frank with Jake Tapper, warns Colorado Supreme Court decision will 'backfire' and help Trump



Former Attorney General Bill Barr told CNN on Wednesday the Colorado Supreme Court ruling that bans Donald Trump from the state's 2024 ballot will backfire.

"I think this case is legally wrong and untenable," Barr told CNN anchor Jake Tapper.

"This kind of action of stretching the law, taking these hyper-aggressive positions to try to knock Trump out of the race, are counterproductive. They backfire," he predicted. "He feeds on grievance just like a fire feeds on oxygen. This is going to end up as a grievance that helps him."

The legal scholarship of the decision notwithstanding, Barr highlighted what he believes is the "fatal" flaw of the court's ruling.

"The core problem here is the denial of due process — to deprive somebody of the right to hold public office requires due process," he said. "This was denied due process. It was a five-day hearing. There was no jury; it was before the judge. They were not able to subpoena witnesses and compel the attendance of witnesses. They relied on the Jan. 6 committee hearings, which is mostly hearsay. There was no right to cross-examine during those hearings, and so forth."

Barr, moreover, predicted the U.S. Supreme Court will quickly grant an appeal and rule in Trump's favor.

'Legally wrong and untenable': Former AG Barr on Colorado Supreme Court ruling www.youtube.com

Polling expert Frank Luntz agreed that the Colorado Supreme Court's decision will only help Trump with voters.

"It's going to be exactly what the indictments did. It's going to be exactly what the criticisms have done," Luntz predicted. "Donald Trump thrives on negativity. He thrives on legal systems that try to hold him accountable. And I'm convinced that his polling numbers are going to go up.

"I would say to the judges, as I said to the Justice Department, 'You're actually making it more likely that Donald Trump is elected next November by how you are pursuing this. You don't explain the decisions. You don't put things in context.' And so Trump climbs and climbs and climbs. And right now he's beating Joe Biden clearly nationwide."

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