Cassidy Hutchinson, a former White House aide, revealed the president’s violent response to an explosive hearing in which she described the White House as aware at the highest levels that violence was not just possible, but possible, on January 6 before attempting to overturn the election. “Ketchup was dripping on the wall,” Trump’s meal had affected the dining room, Hutchinson said. A White House official “noted that the president was extremely angry with the attorney general’s interview with the AP and had thrown his lunch on the wall,” he added. The Attorney General’s public assertion that the results of the 2020 election could not be changed by fraud was a major blow to Mr. Trump’s efforts to convince the general public that such fraud had taken place and that his victory had resulted in his being “stolen.” so far – President Joe Biden. Mr. Trump and his team have been actively involved in pressuring the Justice Department to make a statement to the contrary for weeks, leading to the Attorney General’s somewhat rare public remarks. Tuesday’s hearing included the testimony of Ms. Hutchinson, a senior White House aide who worked for Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, and testified that many of her day-to-day activities reflected those of Mr. Meadows and her boss. Ms Hutchinson made a series of condemnatory revelations on Tuesday. But perhaps nothing more than the astonishing admission that her boss, Mr. Meadows, had privately confessed to her that things “could get really, really bad” on Jan. 6, a prediction she made just days before the attack on Congress. Despite this knowledge, the president’s team attempted to overthrow the 2020 election by illegally interfering in the certification of the Electoral College vote, which ended when Vice President Mike Pence refused to take part.