Rep. Liz Cheney on Friday denied recording or leaking audio from a phone call that appears to show House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy saying he would tell then-President Donald Trump to resign after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
A portion of that call, dated Jan. 10, 2021, aired Thursday night on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show.” Hours earlier, McCarthy denied saying he would tell Trump to step down.
In the audio clip, the California Republican can be heard telling Cheney, R-Wyo., that he believed Trump would be impeached in the House and possibly convicted in the Senate after the Jan. 6 riot.
“The only discussion I would have with him is that I think this will pass, and it would be my recommendation you should resign,” McCarthy said, according to the recording.
Later Friday, news outlets aired a separate audio clip of McCarthy from Jan. 11, 2021. In it, McCarthy tells top House Republicans that Trump admitted he bears some responsibility for the Capitol riot.
“What he did is unacceptable. Nobody can defend that, and nobody should defend it,” McCarthy said, according to the latest recording.
The remarks came days after a mob of Trump’s supporters, spurred by the then-president’s false claims that widespread fraud cost him the 2020 election, stormed the Capitol and disrupted lawmakers’ confirmation of President Joe Biden’s victory.
A spokesperson for Cheney, one of two Republicans on the House select committee probing the Capitol riot, said in a statement Friday morning that the congresswoman “did not record or leak the tape and does not know how the reporters got it.”
“The select committee has asked Kevin McCarthy to speak with us about these events but he has so far declined,” the spokesperson said.
A spokesman for McCarthy did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request to comment. The spokesman also did not immediately explain the contradiction between McCarthy’s recorded remarks and his prior statement, which denied that McCarthy said he would push Trump to resign.
The bombshell recordings could threaten McCarthy’s hopes of becoming speaker of the House if Republicans retake control of the chamber in the 2022 midterm elections. The vast majority of House Republicans — who would vote on whether to make McCarthy speaker — have stayed loyal to Trump.
Though he lost the 2020 election to Biden and has continued to spread conspiracy theories to suggest that race was rigged against him, Trump is the most popular figure in the GOP and its de facto leader. He has hinted he will run for president again in 2024.
The New York Times on Thursday reported that McCarthy and other GOP leaders, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, initially vowed to kick Trump out of politics after the Jan. 6 riot. They quickly backed off due to fears of retribution from Trump and his supporters, according to the newspaper.
“I’ve had it with this guy,” McCarthy told a group of Republican leaders in the days after the attack, according to the Times. The newspaper’s report is based on details from the forthcoming book, “This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden and the Battle for America’s Future,” by Times reporters Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin, who obtained the audio tapes of McCarthy.
In a call with top Republicans — apparently the same call where one of the audio clips came from — McCarthy also wondered aloud if tech companies could suspend the social media accounts of some Republican lawmakers, the Times reported.
“Can’t they take their Twitter accounts away, too?” he reportedly asked.
McCarthy on Thursday released a statement calling the Times’ reporting on him “totally false and wrong.” He accused the “corporate media” of furthering a “liberal agenda” and added that the Biden presidency has shown that America “was better off when President Trump was in the White House.”
The Times’ report also includes a denial from McCarthy spokesman Mark Bednar, who claimed that the GOP leader “never said he’d call Trump to say he should resign.”
But the audio clip shared Thursday night appears to contradict that claim.
In the recording, Cheney referenced the 25th Amendment — a constitutional process for removing a president from office. She then asked McCarthy, “What happens if it gets there after he’s gone? Is, is there any chance? Are you hearing that he might resign? Is there any reason to think that might happen?”
McCarthy responded: “I’ve had a few discussions. My gut tells me no. I’m seriously thinking of having that conversation with him tonight. I haven’t talked to him in a couple days.”
McCarthy said he doubted that Trump would agree to step aside. He added that an impeachment effort against Trump would definitely pass the House and likely the Senate, even if the final vote came after Trump was set to leave office on Jan. 20, 2021.
“But what I think I’m going to do, is I’m going to call him,” McCarthy said. “There’s a lot of different ramifications for that.”
“The only discussion I would have with him is that I think this will pass, and it would be my recommendation you should resign,” McCarthy said. “Um, I mean that would be my take, but I don’t think he would take it. But I don’t know.”
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