A lawyer allied with President Donald Trump first laid out a plot to use false slates of electors to subvert the 2020 election in a previously unknown internal campaign memo that prosecutors are portraying as a crucial link in how the Trump team's efforts evolved into a criminal conspiracy.
The existence of the Dec. 6, 2020, memo came to light in last week's indictment of Trump, though its details remained unclear. But a copy obtained by the New York Times shows for the first time that the lawyer, Kenneth Chesebro, acknowledged from the start that he was proposing "a bold, controversial strategy" that the Supreme Court "likely" would reject in the end.
But even if the plan did not ultimately pass legal muster at the highest level, Chesebro argued that it would achieve two goals: It would focus attention on claims of voter fraud and "buy the Trump campaign more time to win litigation that would deprive Biden of electoral votes and/or add to Trump's column."
The memo had been a missing piece in the public record of how Trump's allies developed their strategy to overturn Biden's victory. In mid-December, the false Trump electors could go through the motions of voting as if they had the authority to do so. Then, on Jan. 6, 2021, Vice President Mike Pence could unilaterally count those slates of votes, rather than the official and certified ones for Joe Biden.
While that basic plan itself was already known, the document, described by prosecutors as the "fraudulent elector memo," provides new details about how it originated and was discussed behind the scenes. Among those details is Chesebro's proposed "messaging" strategy to explain why pro-Trump electors were meeting in states where Biden was declared the winner. The campaign would present that step as "a routine measure that is necessary to ensure" that the correct electoral slate could be counted by Congress if courts or legislatures later concluded that Trump had actually won the states.
It was not the first time Chesebro had raised the notion of creating alternate electors. In November, he had suggested doing so in Wisconsin, although for a different reason: to safeguard Trump's rights in case he later won a court battle and was declared that state's certified winner by Jan. 6, as had happened with Hawaii in 1960.
But the indictment portrayed the Dec. 6 memo as a "sharp departure" from that proposal, becoming what prosecutors say was a criminal plot to engineer "a fake controversy that would derail the proper certification of Biden as president-elect."
"I recognize that what I suggest is a bold, controversial strategy, and that there are many reasons why it might not end up being executed on Jan. 6," Chesebro wrote. "But as long as it is one possible option, to preserve it as a possibility it is important that the Trump-Pence electors cast their electoral votes on Dec. 14."