Former Trump aide Steve Bannon heads to prison to serve his sentence

Former Trump aide Steve Bannon heads to prison to serve his sentence
Former Trump aide Steve Bannon heads to prison to serve his sentence

Former Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon reported to a federal prison in the northeastern United States on Monday to begin serving his sentence for obstructing the congressional investigation into the storming of the Capitol, an AFP photographer saw.

• Read also: Ex-Trump adviser Steve Bannon must go to prison before July 1

“I am proud to go to prison today (…) if that is what it takes to stand up to Joe Biden,” launched this populist ideologue, an influential figure in the ultra-conservative movement, before to enter Danbury Prison (Connecticut State), describing himself as “a political prisoner.”

Steve Bannon, 70, must now serve four months behind bars after a judge rejected a suspension of his sentence following one of his appeals.

Wearing gray pants and a black shirt, he was greeted outside the prison building by a small crowd of supporters with “Trump 2024” flags and by one of the most fierce Trump supporters in Congress, Marjorie Taylor Greene, who hugged him in front of the cameras.

If he no longer officially works for the Republican candidate, Steve Bannon again assured him of his support on Monday and promised that he would use all his influence to promote his re-election, in particular via his podcast “War Room”, which will continue without him.

Refusal to cooperate

Before arriving at Danbury prison, he spoke on his show to welcome the results of the first round of the early legislative elections in France, marked by the clear victory of the far right, and other good results of this movement in other countries during the European elections: “our movement is having its moment,” he rejoiced.

Steve Bannon was sentenced in October 2022 to four months in prison for obstructing the investigative powers of Congress due to his refusal to cooperate with the congressional inquiry into the storming of the Capitol on January 6, 2021, a sentence upheld on appeal on May 10, 2024.

The day before January 6, Steve Bannon predicted that “all hell” would break loose. And on the day that hundreds of Donald Trump supporters stormed the seat of the US Congress, in an attempt to prevent the certification of Joe Biden’s victory in the November 2020 election, Steve Bannon spoke on the phone with the outgoing president. The parliamentarians wanted to question him about his role.

His entry into prison comes on the day that the conservative-majority US Supreme Court again delayed Donald Trump’s federal trial over his alleged attempts to illegally overturn the results of the 2020 election.

Another former advisor to Donald Trump at the White House, Peter Navarro, is already serving a four-month sentence for refusing to respond to a summons from Congress in the investigation into the assault on the Capitol.

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