Friday, July 01, 2022

Independent Senate candidate says Trump should face criminal probe over January 6


By Jason Hancock

An attorney running as an independent for the U.S. Senate in Missouri says Congress’ inquiry into the Jan. 6 insurrection has turned up enough evidence to warrant a criminal investigation of former President Donald Trump by federal law enforcement.

John Wood, a Republican and former U.S. attorney who until last week served as senior investigative counsel for the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol, announced Wednesday that he was running for the U.S. Senate as an independent.

Part of his motivation for entering the race, he said in an interview, was the need for Missouri to elect a senator willing to stand up for democracy itself.






 

“When you see people attacking the U.S. Capitol because they’re unhappy that the vice president wouldn’t unilaterally decide the outcome of the election, I mean, we’ve kind of lost our consensus around following the Constitution and preserving our democracy,” he said. “Part of living in a democracy is accepting the results of an election regardless of whether your team wins.”

That condemnation extends to the former president, Wood said, who still refuses to accept the results of the 2020 election and whose rhetoric is “really over the top and dangerous.”

Wood, 52, said that with the congressional hearings still ongoing it would be premature for him to say whether or not he believed Trump committed any crimes by encouraging his supporters to march to the Capitol and “fight like hell” on Jan. 6, 2021.

But “morally, and ethically,” Wood said, Trump “bears a lot of responsibility.”

Wood entered the race Wednesday as Republican leaders continue to publicly fret that former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens could prevail in a 21-candidate GOP primary for the seat of retiring U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt.

Facing allegations that he committed violent sexual misconduct and stole from a veterans charity, Greitens was forced to resign from office in 2018 to avoid impeachment and settle a felony charge.

Earlier this year, his ex-wife accused him of spousal and child abuse.

Greitens has denied all allegations of wrongdoing, though not under oath. And thus far the accusations have not hurt his standing in most polls of the race.

The prospect of a Greitens nomination played into his decision to join the race, Wood said. But he intends to run an independent campaign regardless of who emerges from the GOP primary, he said, because each of the leading candidates in the field are too extreme.

“This race is about more than just one U.S. Senate seat,” Wood said. “My hope is that when I win, it’ll send a message to both major parties — not just in Missouri, but across the country — that while being divisive and extreme may help people get their party’s nominations, it’s going to hurt them in a general election.”








To get on the November ballot as an independent, Wood will need to submit petitions signed by 10,000 registered voters by Aug. 1.

Former Republican U.S. Sen. John Danforth has urged Wood to run as a right-leaning independent. Wood once worked for Danforth’s staff.

On Thursday, Danforth announced a super PAC he founded called Missouri Stands United plans to spend as much as $20 million between now and November supporting Wood’s candidacy. The PAC is already on the air with ads featuring Danforth calling on all Missourians to unite and support an Independent who can help us to heal the nation’s divisions.

“We will be working to ensure voters across Missouri know who John is and urging them to take the first important step in support for a new way in our politics: Sign a petition to get John on the ballot,” Danforth said.

A St. Louis County native, Wood is currently living in Kansas City with his wife and two children.

He served as U.S. attorney for Missouri’s Western District from 2007 to 2009 and before that held several roles in the George W. Bush administration. He was working as general counsel for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce when he stepped down in September to become senior investigative counsel for the Jan. 6 committee.






 

Wood described his ideology as “​​what used to be considered a mainstream conservative Republican.

“I believe in limited government, lower taxes, less government spending, less regulation, strong law enforcement, strong national defense and judges who will interpret the law rather than make the law.”

He agrees with the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling overturning the constitutional right to an abortion, and says he supports a near universal prohibition on the procedure. But he would like to see Missouri law changed so that its abortion ban includes “exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother.”

Only abortions conducted in cases of a medical emergency are permitted under Missouri law.



The government should not prohibit the use of contraception, Wood said.

He supports the Second Amendment, Wood said, and would have voted in favor of the bipartisan gun safety bill recently passed by Congress and signed by President Joe Biden in the response to the mass murder at an elementary school in Texas.

“I applaud Sen. (Roy) Blunt for his leadership and being part of a bipartisan coalition to get something done,” Wood said of the gun bill. “But I think it’s tragic that it required, you know, a national tragedy to force action.”

Wood says he has no intention of playing spoiler in the Senate race this fall, though he knows he faces an uphill battle running as an independent. But he thinks voters are tired of what politics has become and are ready for something new.

“I’m still a Republican,” he said. “I am not leaving the Republican Party. I’m just running an unaffiliated campaign because I think Republican primaries have become a race to the bottom to see you can be the most divisive and the most extreme.

“So for the people who supported Ronald Reagan and Jack Danforth and Kit Bond and Roy Blunt and John Ashcroft, that’s who I am,” he said. “I’m a traditional Republican and conservative.”

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Another Democrat trick. Nice try, but our new senator will have an R after his/her name.

Anonymous said...

You are correct, these Dems will not ruin Missouri, libs stay in your state you live and created

Anonymous said...

It’s the r way or it’s the d way and that is what’s wrong with America. Little spoiled brats, both parties. Politicians love this, pit us against each other so they divide and conquer. Well mission accomplished! Corporate America and the worthless elected politicians LAUGH all the way to the bank. We are not united at all thanks to all your r and d bs.

Anonymous said...

We are not unified because the left has lost its mind, the left doesn’t even know what bathroom to use, they enjoy the fact that they kill babies, they want a ridiculously high minimum wage ( minimum wage is for teens it’s not meant to live on, it’s a starting point in life to make you want to achieve more, they want universal health care, if it’s so good why do they have privatized insurance hospitals etc in the same country the have free health care? Wait a month for the free stuff or see a Dr the same day when it’s privatized. They want you to believe homosexuality is normal, it isn’t I dare to say 99% of the homosexuals were molested as a child. They want to limit your bill of rights 1st 2nd and 4th at a minimum. They want us to be like other countries, Why we are the best in the world but we will be loosing ground with the Biden administration. Oh how’s that inflation treating you. On the matter of fuel prices hands down Biden problem, God himself is the only one that I would believe to tell me otherwise . Yes I believe in God and Jesus Christ there is no other.

Randy quick question you always had articles slamming Trump but I don’t see you publish much of anything about Traitor Joe, reading his script, his 5 question press conferences with approved dumb down questions.

Anonymous said...

Wow.


The stupid runs wide and deep in these comments.

These are same type of people that fought municipal sewer and water systems so they and their families could continue to have their freedom to drink polluted water.





Anonymous said...

Tell me what’s not the truth with the 2:45 statement…

Anonymous said...

To begin, there is no statement at 2:45.

Anonymous said...

Where do you think gay people used the bathroom before? That’s right fools, in the bathrooms that were available. There will be gays and abortions etc rather you like it not R babies. No matter what the Supreme Court says!!!

Anonymous said...

I meant 2:42 I apologize

Anonymous said...

Go hide in your basement from Covid and keep cashing those welfare checks

Anonymous said...

2:42 PM Is really buying into the 'us vs them' narrative.