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On June 1, 2021, New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman tweeted that former President Donald Trump has been telling a number of people he’s in contact with that he expects he will get reinstated by August, adding that this isn’t how it works. The Trump reporting came amid former National Security Advisor Mike Flynn's apparent endorsement (though he claims his words were twisted) of a Myanmar-style coup that would bring Trump back to power. Trump's purported belief requires one not only to buy into the lie that the 2020 election was stolen, but also to disregard the existence of the United States Constitution, which provides no mechanism for Trump to return to office outside of winning another election. Subsequent reporting by several media outlets, notably National Review and The Washington Post, also reported that Trump has discussed this expectation. On June 2, 2021, The Washington Post, citing people familiar with his [Former President Trump's] comments, reported that Trump remains relentlessly focused on the false claim that the November election was stolen from him and is increasingly consumed with the notion that ballot reviews pushed by his supporters around the country could prove that he won. Trump's interest in this fantasy, the Post reported, has been propelled by an array of figures who have publicly touted false claims of election fraud, including MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, Pennsylvania state Sen. Doug Mastriano, and a One America News Network host. On June 3, 2021, National Review provided additional confirmation of Trump's alleged fixation on returning to office in August. In a story titled Maggie Haberman is Right, writer Charles C. W. Cooke reported not only on the veracity of Trump pushing this claim but also that Trump genuinely believes it to be true: At the same event in which Flynn apparently endorsed a military coup, former Trump lawyer Sidney Powell — whose defense in a current voter fraud related defamation lawsuit is that reasonable people would not take her claims about elections seriously — argued that it should be that he [Trump] can simply be reinstated, that a new Inauguration Day is set. As CNN legal analyst Steve Vladeck explained, however, there's no regulation, rule, statute or constitutional provision that comes within a million light-years of what she's [Powell] describing. There is no mechanism for 'reinstating' a former President. There is no procedure for setting a 'new Inauguration Day.'
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