If you’re reading this, odds are you’ve known for a long time that former President Donald Trump’s claims of a vast election fraud conspiracy are total fabrications. As is becoming clearer as the months pass, leading Republican Party figures have known the same for just as long.
They have either kept quiet about their concerns or been excommunicated from their roles. Instead, the loudest voices in the GOP are the ones who are actively promoting Trump’s lies. But even those who are remaining quiet are content to use those lies to further their own agendas.
The Washington Post reported Tuesday that one of those GOP leaders, Justin Riemer, was trying to get his colleagues to see sense back in November. Riemer, the Republican National Committee’s chief counsel, wrote in an email to a staffer that the RNC shouldn’t post Trump’s claims about ballot fraud on its social media accounts. And he didn’t mince words:
“What Rudy and Jenna are doing is a joke and they are getting laughed out of court,” Riemer, a longtime Republican lawyer, wrote to Liz Harrington, a former party spokeswoman, on Nov. 28, referring to Trump attorneys Rudolph W. Giuliani and Jenna Ellis. “They are misleading millions of people who have wishful thinking that the president is going to somehow win this thing.”
Giuliani reportedly tried — and failed — to get Riemer fired after he learned about that email. But if you look at the RNC’s position since then, you can see two things are true. First, that the committee on the whole followed Riemer’s advice and hasn’t on the whole claimed that the election was stolen from Trump. And Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel never signed off on the wildest lies Trump put out there and has conceded that President Joe Biden won.
Second, the RNC has apparently decided that lying through omission isn’t a sin. Because while the party’s apparatchiks aren’t touting the big lie directly, they are still backing Trump and using him to strengthen their fundraising efforts. Politico reported in May that the RNC had “sent 97 emails mentioning Trump” to its mailing list since Jan. 6. And it isn’t condemning candidates who blast out conspiracy theories or refusing to offer them funding and campaign infrastructure.








