Trump's ex-campaign manger Brad Parscale said in private texts that Trump is to blame for Capitol rioter's death: 'I feel guilty for helping him win'

Trump's ex-campaign manger Brad Parscale said in private texts that Trump is to blame for Capitol rioter's death: 'I feel guilty for helping him win'
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  • Trump's former campaign manager messaged a campaign spokeswoman that he blamed the president for a Capitol rioter's death.

  • The campaign manager, Brad Parscale, also said he felt guilty for helping Trump win in 2016.

  • After January 6, Parscale said Trump's conduct was akin to "a sitting president asking for civil war."

President Donald Trump's former campaign manager Brad Parscale blamed the president for the death of a Capitol rioter in a series of private texts revealed at the 7th hearing of the House select committee investigating the January 6 insurrection.

In the messages, Parscale told former Trump campaign spokeswoman Katrina Pierson that he felt remorse for helping Trump get elected in 2016.

"This week," Parscale wrote on the evening of January 6, "I feel guilty for helping him win."

Parscale texts to Katrina Pierson
Brad Parscale's texts to Katrina PiersonHouse Select

Parscale, who had been a member of Trump's campaign since his first presidential run in 2016, likened Trump's comments on January 6 as "a sitting president asking for civil war."

He also suggested that Trump's words lead to the death of a rioter. Messages reveal that Pierson tried to push back, writing that "it wasn't the rhetoric," but Parscale firmly disagreed.

"Katrina," Parscale wrote. "Yes it was."

Parscale texts
Brad Parscale's texts to Katrina PiersonHouse select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol
Texts from Trump campaign manager
Brad Parscale's texts to Katrina PiersonHouse select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol

Parscale was demoted from his role as Trump's 2020 presidential campaign manager in July 2020. Months later, in September, he was hospitalized after he threatened to harm himself with a gun, police in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, said. The former campaign manager had ten of his guns taken away after his wife, Candace Parscale, said that he had abused her — an officer noted that she had bruises on her arms as well as "scratches and bruising on her face."

Read the original article on Business Insider