Norms Impact
Trump pardons Rudy Giuliani, others involved in efforts to overturn 2020 election | CNN Politics
Trump used the pardon power to shield allies tied to an effort to overturn an election, collapsing the norm that clemency is not a reward for attacking democratic transfer of power.
Nov 10, 2025
Sources
Summary
President Donald Trump signed a proclamation issuing “full, complete, and unconditional” pardons to dozens of political allies tied to efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, including Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, and Mark Meadows.
The use of clemency is being deployed to absolve or protect key participants in an election-subversion network, including a former Justice Department official now serving as a senior OMB official.
The practical effect is to erase federal criminal exposure for named individuals while leaving state prosecutions pending and inviting the pardoned to leverage federal clemency to blunt accountability elsewhere.
Reality Check
When a president deploys clemency to protect the architects and operators of an election-subversion effort, we are watching accountability get converted into a tool of loyalty—and our right to fair elections gets treated as negotiable. Even if a pardon can extinguish federal exposure for conduct that could implicate statutes commonly used in election-subversion investigations—such as 18 U.S.C. § 371 (conspiracy), 18 U.S.C. § 1512 (obstruction), and 52 U.S.C. § 20511 (election fraud)—it cannot erase state liability, and it signals to future operatives that federal consequences can be wiped away by political power. The most dangerous precedent here is not technical legality; it is the normalization of using the presidency to insulate a network that tried to reverse voters’ choices, while leaving the public to absorb the long-term damage to institutional trust and deterrence.
Media
Detail
<p>A proclamation posted late Sunday by the Department of Justice’s Pardon Attorney, Ed Martin, listed dozens of individuals receiving a “full, complete, and unconditional pardon” from President Donald Trump for conduct connected to efforts to overturn the 2020 election.</p><p>The list includes Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, Mark Meadows, Jeffrey Clark, John Eastman, Ken Chesebro, Jenna Ellis, Kelli Ward and Michael Ward, and Boris Epshteyn. The document states it is dated November 7 and appears to bear the president’s signature, and it explicitly says it does not apply to Trump.</p><p>None of the listed individuals are currently charged with federal crimes, though some were described as unindicted co-conspirators in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s election-subversion case against Trump, which prosecutors withdrew after Trump’s 2024 election victory. State criminal cases remain pending against several people on the list, including in Georgia, and prosecutions connected to 2020-related conduct are ongoing in Wisconsin, Arizona, and Nevada. Presidential pardons do not apply to state or local charges.</p>