Cassidy Hutchinson, a former Trump White House aide, said she had to flee Washington, D.C. for safety after she testified before the Jan. 6 Committee.

“I could not go back to my apartment,” Hutchinson told reporter Tracy Smith in an interview set to air Sunday on “CBS New Sunday Morning.”

Hutchinson, the former assistant to Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, said her safety was threatened. Her legal team recommended she leave town.

“I ended up moving down to Atlanta for several months,” she said.

Hutchinson was the first White House member to testify before the committee. On June 28, 2022, Hutchinson told the committee about what she witnessed in the days following the Capitol insurrection.

The former aide told Smith that she almost “darted” from the holding room before testifying.

“I heard the door click open and I turned around and I looked at my attorney and said ‘I can’t do this.’ And I started to walk and he gently pushed my shoulders. And he said, ‘You can do this.’ And then we walked out,” Hutchinson said in the interview.

Hutchinson said she is still a Republican but will not be supporting former President Trump’s White House bid in the 2024 election.

Hutchinson is releasing a book which details her experience in the White House and leading up to testifying at the committee. Her book accuses former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani of groping her backstage during Trump’s Jan. 6 rally.

Hutchinson’s first TV interview will air on CBS and be available for streaming on Sept. 24. Her book, titled “Enough,” is set to publish on Sept. 26.

  • eestileib@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    It’s insane, I can’t believe she is still a Republican. The (literal in many cases) death grip that party has on people.

    I don’t know anybody who is that proud of being a Democrat, even the people I know who work in the local party office…

      • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The thing that keeps two parties in power in the US is the first-past-the-post voting system. Get ranked choice or another similar voting method in, and suddenly there is enough room for multiple parties, and legislators have to work together to get things done.

        So to me, it’s not a matter of something better showing up; it’s the good that already exists being suppressed by an outdated, exclusionary voting system that never lets anything better rise to the top. Change the voting system, and Congress is no longer a two-sided, razor’s edge, ongoing political hostage situation.

        There are some fantastic videos about this subject on YouTube; if anyone’s interested I can post some links.