What Mark Meadowss sudden cooperation with the Jan. 6 committee could mean Aaron Blake - Tuesday November 30, 2021
© Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post
Nov. 12 brought potentially fortuitous developments for the House Jan. 6 committee and its arduous campaign to get testimony from key allies of former president Donald Trump.
In the morning, former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows signaled that he would defy the committees subpoena and failed to show up for a deposition. A few hours later, the Justice Department announced a grand jury had indicted former Trump aide Stephen K. Bannon, whom the House held in contempt for doing much the same thing.
As we noted at the time, it set Meadows up for a crucial decision about how firmly to hold his line and risk being held in contempt himself, which the committee quickly threatened. That decision also could send a signal to other potential witnesses, as we wrote:
Click for Full Text!