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‘POTUS just called me’: Pa. GOP emails shed new light on 2020 election upheaval
The emails show how conspiracy theories permeated the Legislature. One lawmaker said a fellow Republican was spreading “crap” and “hurting our party” by trying to invalidate millions of votes.

The emails show how conspiracy theories permeated the Legislature. One lawmaker said a fellow Republican was spreading “crap” and “hurting our party” by trying to invalidate millions of votes.
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State Sen. Doug Mastriano, with Donald Trump in November 2022, spread false information to his colleagues at Trump's request, according to emails from December 2020 that surfaced in an unrelated lawsuit in Erie County.Read moreDustin Franz / Bloomberg
- by William Bender and Gillian McGoldrick
Updated on Jun 16, 2023, 5:00 a.m. ET
In mid-December 2020, even Pennsylvania State Sen. Doug Mastriano apparently had some doubts about the latest plan hatched by Donald Trump’s inner circle to select fake Electoral College electors in an attempt to reverse the results of the presidential election.
The right-wing senator had heard from other Republicans that the scheme might be “illegal,” in the words of lawyer Christina Bobb, then a One America News anchor who later joined Trump’s legal team.
“Mastriano needs a call from the mayor. This needs to be done. Talk to him about legalities of what they are doing,” Bobb wrote on Dec. 12, 2020, to Trump advisers, referring to Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City. That email and others from Trump’s team were reported last summer by the New York Times.
But previously unreported communications obtained by The Inquirer show that, two days after Bobb’s email, Trump himself called Mastriano — this time peddling lies about Dominion voting machines.
“POTUS just called me,” Mastriano wrote in a Dec. 14, 2020, email with the subject line “Document from POTUS.” “He asked that I share the attached with you.”
Mastriano was happy to oblige. He sent the email to an unidentified group of recipients, with findings from a debunked “study” of voting machines in Michigan, including a false claim that there was a “68% error rate in votes cast.”
“A Cover-up is Happening regarding the voting machines in Michigan,” reads one of the talking points Mastriano forwarded.
That same day, Mastriano posted on Facebook a link to a conservative news site with a headline about how Dominion software was “intentionally designed to influence election results.”
“Uh oh,” Mastriano wrote.
Those claims, of course, were not true. In April, Fox News agreed to pay Dominion Voting Systems $787.5 million to settle a defamation case stemming from false claims it had aired about the company’s voting machines.
Lawsuit unearths new emails
That Trump had been in contact with Mastriano and other Pennsylvania legislative leaders in December 2020 has previously been reported in the media, and documented by the House Jan. 6 committee that investigated the attack on the U.S. Capitol.
But the new emails reveal additional details about Trump’s pressure campaign in Pennsylvania and provide a behind-the-scenes glimpse into how it was received in Harrisburg. Election-related conspiracy theories and bad legal advice percolated quickly through the legislature.
Trump, who has already been indicted in New York and Miami, remains the focus of criminal investigations in Washington, D.C., and Georgia for his efforts to cling to power after losing the election.
Emails among Pennsylvania state representatives and senators are generally not considered public record under the state’s Right-to-Know law. These communications recently surfaced as a result of a defamation lawsuit that State Sen. Dan Laughlin filed last year against the Erie Reader and one of its contributing editors over an opinion piece.
By suing the weekly newspaper, Laughlin, an Erie County Republican, opened the door to legal discovery — and depositions — that unearthed otherwise confidential communications.
In addition to a couple of Mastriano emails referencing his conversations with Trump, other emails point to disagreements within the GOP about challenging the results of the election.
For instance, Laughlin privately scoffed at a lawsuit filed by Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, one of Trump’s top supporters, seeking to disenfranchise about 2.6 million voters by throwing out every mail-in ballot in Pennsylvania.
“We’re not saying a word on this crap,” Laughlin wrote from his iPhone on Dec. 8, 2020. “Mike Kelly is hurting our party right now.”
Kelly’s legal challenge was unanimously rejected by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The U.S. Supreme Court later unanimously declined to hear the case on appeal.