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US President Donald Trump has issued a new wave of sweeping pardons, granting “full, complete, and unconditional” clemency to his former personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, former chief of staff Mark Meadows, and other key figures involved in efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
The proclamation, posted late Sunday (Monday night AEDT) by government pardon attorney Ed Martin, also names conservative attorneys Sidney Powell and John Eastman. Notably, the proclamation explicitly states the pardon does not apply to President Trump himself.

Sidney Powell.
The pardons, however, have immediate legal limitations: Presidential pardons apply only to federal crimes. None of the named individuals were charged in federal cases directly related to their 2020 election activities, though Giuliani, Powell, and Eastman were alleged co-conspirators in the federal case previously brought against Trump.
The move comes even as many of the named allies face legal challenges at the state level. Giuliani, Meadows, and others have been charged by state prosecutors, but many of these state cases have stalled or are limping along.

John Eastman.
Furthermore, the pardon does not shield Giuliani from civil penalties; he has already been disbarred in Washington, DC, and New York, and lost a $US148 million ($226.4 million) defamation case brought by Georgia election workers targeted by his conspiracy theories.
The White House described the prosecution efforts against Trump allies as “a grave national injustice” and framed the pardons as a step toward “national reconciliation,” yet the move underscores Trump’s continued efforts to promote the debunked narrative that the 2020 election was stolen.