Sidney Powell
Sidney Powell speaking during a press conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, DC, on November 19.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • The Trump campaign announced on Sunday that it was parting ways with attorney Sidney Powell. 
  • Powell’s wild conspiracy theories proved too much even for President Donald Trump, according to reports, as his legal campaign to overturn the election result descended last week into farce. 
  • Powell has alleged a vast plot by communists, financier George Soros and GOP officials in Georgia to steal the election from Trump. She has provided no convincing evidence to back the claims. 
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

When President Donald Trump on November 15 announced the legal team leading his campaign to overturn the result of the presidential election, among them Dallas attorney Sidney Powell, he described them as a “truly great team.” 

But only a week later, the Trump campaign abruptly distanced itself from Powell. The attorney’s outlandish conspiracy theories became too much even for a president whose political identity is founded on stirring suspicion of “deep state” elites. 

 

Sources close to the president told The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman that Powell’s claims had become too much for Trump, and that for days the president has been “agitating” about Powell and Rudy Giuliani, the former New York City mayor leading the legal challenge. 

A particular focus of his ire was last Thursday’s bizarre press conference, where Powell aired the wild conspiracy theory, offering no evidence whatsoever, that Venezuelan socialists and Jewish financier George Soros had orchestrated a vast plot using rigged voting machines to steal the election from Trump. 

"She was too conspiratorial even for him," one Trump adviser told Haberman. 

Another tipping point was a federal judge in Pennsylvania Saturday rejecting the Trump campaign's legal challenge to the election result in the state, and directing withering criticism of the legal case the campaign's attorneys had presented. 

 

A Trump campaign official echoed the assessment in remarks to the LA Times' legal affair columnist Harry Litman. 

In its courtroom presentations, where stating deliberate falsehoods can attract serious legal penalties, the Trump campaign has notably declined to air the more incendiary claims made by figures such as Powell.

Powell is no stranger to stirring conspiracy theories in her defense of clients. 

As the attorney for Michael Flynn, the former White House national security advisor, she promoted the QAnon conspiracy theory, whose adherents groundlessly believe that a "deep state" cabal of child-abusing Hollywood stars and Democrats are secretly plotting against Trump and his allies. 

But comments to the Newsmax organization only two days after Thursday's press conference attracted criticism even from the president's allies. 

In the interview, Powell claimed that top Republican officials in Georgia, including Governor Brian Kemp, were part of the plot to fix the election.

"Georgia's probably going to be the first state I'm going to blow up and Mr. Kemp and the secretary of state need to go with it," she said, adding that her lawsuit would be "biblical" in its scale. 

Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a longtime Trump advisor, was scathing about the Trump campaign's faltering legal effort to overturn the election in an interview with ABC News Sunday, describing the president's legal team as a "national embarrassment." He singled out Powell's claims about Georgia GOP officials for criticism, describing her conduct as "outrageous."

In a statement released after the Trump campaign cut its ties with her, Powell refused to relent, pledging to submit an "epic" lawsuit this week containing evidence of the claims that have alienated her from the president's allies.

Powell didn't immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

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