If you are a Republican, you can do anything
Stephen Prager for Common Dreams

Late Sunday night, Justice Department attorney Ed
Martin posted a list of over 70 people who would receive
pardons. Many of the figures included were named as unindicted co-conspirators
or charged at the state level for their roles in the plot to knowingly spread
false claims of widespread voter fraud in an attempt to push states to reject
former President Joe Biden’s victories in key swing states and pressure Vice
President Mike Pence into
stopping the certification of the election.
Among those pardoned are Trump lawyers Rudy
Giuliani and Sidney Powell, who publicly promoted baseless claims of a
vast conspiracy against the president to the public, claiming that the election
was stolen by a cabal of foreign infiltrators and scheming election officials.
They later faced defamation lawsuits for these claims, and in legal
proceedings, Giuliani conceded he
made false statements about election workers, while Powell’s
lawyers argued that “no reasonable person” would conclude her
public claims were statements of fact.

Also receiving pardons were attorneys John Eastman and
Kenneth Chesebro. They were part of what Pence called Trump’s “gaggle of crackpot lawyers,” who
concocted the tortured legal theory that the vice president could declare
Biden’s victory in swing states illegitimate and anoint Trump as the winner.
Eastman privately admitted to Trump that the scheme was
illegal but pressed ahead with it anyway, culminating in the January 6,
2021, insurrection at the US Capitol, during which Trump supporters chanted,
“Hang Mike Pence,” and tried to stop the election results from being certified.
Also pardoned were several of the right-wing activists who signed documents falsely claiming to be electors from states that had certified the election for Biden.
Crucially, the individuals listed never faced federal
criminal indictments for their election subversion attempts. However, dozens of
those on the list were charged with crimes in swing states—including Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin, and
Nevada—related to the effort. The pardons mean these officials cannot be
indicted at the federal level for these crimes.
Though the pardon list is broad, giving clemency to
“all United
States citizens for conduct relating to the advice, creation,
organization, execution, submission, support, voting activities, participation
in or advocacy for or of any slate or proposed slate of presidential electors…
as well for any conduct relating to their efforts to expose voting fraud and
vulnerabilities in the 2020 presidential election,” it explicitly states that
it “does not apply” to Trump himself, indicating that his legal team is not yet
ready to test the theory that the president can pardon himself.
Still, the language Martin used in the announcement—“No MAGA
left behind”—signaled the goal of creating a two-tiered justice system where
those who display loyalty to Trump are immune from the law.
“The stated goal of the pardon attorney is to reward the
president’s political supporters,” wrote Matt
Gertz, a senior fellow for Media Matters for
America on social
media.
It coincides with Trump’s broader efforts to give
get-out-of-jail-free cards to anyone who gives him political support.
Immediately after returning to office, he gave blanket pardons to
more than 1,500 people who participated in the violent effort to overturn the
election on his behalf on January 6. Since then,
his Justice Department has moved to fire or suspend those who brought cases against them, even for
unrelated crimes.
Simply being a public Trump supporter has often been enough
for people to be let off the hook for petty crimes. Florida healthcare executive
Paul Walczak, who was convicted of federal tax evasion, reportedly got a pardon after
his mother made a substantial donation to Trump’s Super PAC. He later
gave pardons to reality stars Todd and Julie Chrisley, a
pair of vocal supporters, who were convicted of bank and tax fraud. He
also pardoned Virginia Sheriff
Scott Jenkins, another prominent supporter, who was convicted in a bribery
scandal for accepting “cash for badges.”
“Pardon attorney Ed Martin explicitly linked the pardons to
his ‘No MAGA left behind’ mantra—tweeting the news in reply to a post that said
exactly that,” noted senior Lawfare editor Anna Bower. “Ironically, Martin also leads the
Weaponization Working Group, which probes alleged ‘politicization’ of the
Justice Department.”
Tyson Slocum, an energy policy expert at Public Citizen, warned that
these pardons send a clear message to those hoping to help Trump subvert future
elections.
“Trump’s pardons of Republicans who
have committed crimes,” he said, “is a setup to encourage state-level
Republican election officials to take actions to illegally steal the election,
knowing that if they succeed, they’ll be pardoned.”