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Tuesday 29 June 2021

Rudy Giuliani was 'drinking heavily and incoherently telling Trump that Pence would overturn the election results the night before January 6th', book claims

 Rudy Giuliani was 'heavily drinking' and fueling Donald Trump’s false belief that Mike Pence could overturn the election results the day before the January 6 Capitol riot, according to an upcoming book on the final days of the former president’s term. 

'The one person Trump did have at his side, Rudy Giuliani, was drinking heavily and in a constant state of excitation, often almost incoherent in his agitation and mania,' author Michael Wolff wrote in an excerpt of his book published in New York Magazine on Monday.

Wolff explained that Giuliani was one of the only one's within Trump's inner circle who was still standing by his side when the then-president started waging his 2020 election fraud claims.

'Almost everyone who remained around the president understood that he, along with Giuliani, did in fact actually believe that there was yet a decent chance of upsetting the electoral count and having Trump declared the Electoral College winner or, failing that, prolonging the election and returning the fight to the disputed states,' Wolff wrote.

'The president's aides (and family) understood, too, that he was the only one (along with Giuliani, which only made the situation more alarming) in any professional political sphere to believe this. Hence — although they did not call it such and tried to see it as more nuanced — derangement.'

Wolff also detailed that Giuliani pumped up claims that Pence, as vice president, could somehow stop Congress from certifying the Electoral College results for Biden as he presided over the joint session on January 6.

Rudy Giuliani, according to excerpts from an upcoming book, was 'drinking heavily' and one of the only one within Donald Trump's inner circle who back his claims of widespread voter fraud

Rudy Giuliani, according to excerpts from an upcoming book, was 'drinking heavily' and one of the only one within Donald Trump's inner circle who back his claims of widespread voter fraud 

Donald Trump speaks to a crowd of supporters outside the White House on January 6, 2021
Mike Pence presides over a joint session of Congress as they certified the election results for Biden on January 6, 2021

Giuliani also told Trump (pictured left at the Jan. 6 rally) that Vice President Mike Pence (pictured right presiding over the Jan. 6 session of Congress) could constitutionally stop Congress from certifying the Electoral College results for Joe Biden

In the book, he wrote that 'Giuliani, as though on a loop,' would repeat: 'There is no question, none at all, that the VP can do this. That's a fact. The Constitution gives him the authority not to certify. It goes back to the state legislatures.'

A new book offers an account of how Trump responded the day his supporters attacked the Capitol

A new book offers an account of how Trump responded the day his supporters attacked the Capitol

'Landslide: The Final Days of the Trump Presidency' is set to hit shelves on July 27. Excerpts will go out in the July 5 edition of NY Mag.

Wolff delivers a blow-by-blow account of the hours and days following the attack.

It also details that in the hours after hundreds demonstrators attacked the U.S. Capitol Trump turned on his supporters.

'This looks terrible. This is really bad,' he told an aide by telephone after watching television coverage of his fans ransacking the Capitol and as his small team tried to work out a survival strategy.

'These aren't our people, these idiots with these outfits.

'They look like Democrats.'

The smell of marijuana hung over clumps of protesters, many of whom had dressed for the occasion - some in camouflage gear, some in jackets made from flags, one as Abraham Lincoln and, in images that came to define the protests, another in a horned headdress. 

Trump addresses supporters at his first rally since leaving the White House. A new book reveals how he turned on his own fans after watching the violence unfold at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6

Trump addresses supporters at his first rally since leaving the White House. A new book reveals how he turned on his own fans after watching the violence unfold at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6


It also claims Ivanka Trump was going around the West Wing talking about getting her children into private school on January 6.

'Ivanka Trump had been floating around the West Wing, chatting to a variety of people. Her children had gotten into private school in Florida, and she was pleased about this — an excited topic of conversation. 

'She was pulled away from her discussion about schools to join the increasingly tense debate about how to respond to the news,' Wolff writes. 

Then, as MAGA supporters stormed the Capitol, she allegedly downplayed the issue.

Wolff writes:  'No one in the White House was seeing this as the full-on assault on the Capitol and the nail in the coffin of the Trump administration that the world would shortly understand it to be; they were, for perhaps another 90 minutes or so, still treating this as 'an optics issue,' as Ivanka was putting it.

'It wasn't until later in the three o'clock hour that Trump seemed to begin the transition from seeing the mob as people protesting the election — defending him so he would defend them — to seeing them as 'not our people.' Therefore, he bore no responsibility for them.'

As the extent of the violence became clear, advisers urged the president to post a Twitter statement that would encourage people to go home, according to an excerpt published Monday. 

'Bad apples, like ANTIFA or other crazed leftists, infiltrated today's peaceful protest over the fraudulent vote count,' said one, using the voice of Trump.

'Violence is never acceptable! MAGA supporters embrace our police and the rule of law and should leave the Capitol now!'

The other said: 'The fake news media who encouraged this summer's violent and radical riots are now trying to blame peaceful and innocent MAGA supporters for violent actions.


'This isn't who we are! Our people should head home and let the criminals suffer the consequences!'

In the event, according to Wolff, he ignored both as he continued to fume that the election had been stolen from him.

In calls to allies he sought assurances that coverage of the protests was overblown.

The book recounts how one of his key advisers was watching the trouble unfold from his home in Arlington, Virginia.

Jason Miller began drafting a statement that would essentially do what Trump had not done so far: Concede that Joe Biden won.

He spoke to Chief of Staff Mark Meadows before speaking to Trump himself.

'How bad is this?' Trump asked, diverging from his usual tactic of seeking assurances that everything was perfect.

Protesters dressed like superheros, militiamen, veterans of the American Revolution and as Abraham Lincoln

Protesters dressed like superheros, militiamen, veterans of the American Revolution and as Abraham Lincoln


'Mr. President, today is literally going to change everything,' said Miller, according to the account.

At that point, Trump turned on his supporters who were all over the TV attacking the Capitol, calling them 'idiots with these outfits.'

The first lady then joined in the call on speakerphone.

'The media is trying to go and say this is who we are,' she said. 'We don't support this.'

'That's what we have to make clear,' said Miller, as he read a proposed draft statement.

As they haggled over whether to talk about an 'orderly' or 'peaceful' transition, Trump apparently began to realize that the statement was not just about the protesters. It was about his conduct too.

'The media thinks I'm not going to leave,' he said. 'Do they really think that? That's crazy.'

Miller responded: 'We've never laid that out. I really can't stress enough how much we have to make it clear that we're fully onboard with an orderly transition.'

With the president's Twitter account suspended earlier in the day, they had to sent it out via Dan Scavino, Trump's social media guru.

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