Mr Bowers told the committee that after dropping Mr. Trump, a truck passed by his neighborhood playing a recording that described him as a pedophile. Mr. Bowers, who spoke of the Constitution in reverent and spiritual terms, had tears in his eyes as he described his seriously ill daughter enduring some of the harassment outside their home. (He died last year.)

The Issues of the Hearings of the Parliamentary Committee of January 6

Similarly, Georgia’s foreign minister, Brad Rafensperger, testified that after rejecting Trump’s request by telephone to find out who would vote for him in the election, his wife of 40 years received threats of “sexual harassment.” threats through messages and people broke into his bride’s house. “It turned my life upside down,” said Wandrea Moss, an Georgia election worker who has been implicated in one of Mr. Trump’s false allegations of electoral fraud. Ms. Moss, known as Shaye, added: “It has affected my life in a big way – in every way – and all because of lies.” And the commission contrasts the four officials’ willingness to speak with the refusal of many of Trump’s allies and others around him to tell investigators what they know. In particular, spokeswoman Liz Cheney, a Wyoming Republican and vice chair of the committee, singled out Pat Cipollone, a White House aide to Trump’s adviser, who has repeatedly called for a reversal of the election. “Our committee is convinced that Donald Trump does not want Mr Chipolone to testify here,” he said. “But we believe that the American people deserve to hear from Mr Cipollone. He should appear before this committee and we are working to secure his testimony. “ The plan to enlist the help of state lawmakers to create fake ballots seems to have started a few days after the election, when a pro-Trump lawyer, Cleta Mitchell, sent an email proposing the idea to John Eastman, another lawyer close to him. Trump.