Jack Smith Testified. The System Flinched.
The Hearing That Proved the System Is Afraid of the Truth
Jack Smith Testified. The System Flinched.
The Hearing That Proved the System Is Afraid of the Truth
The Jack Hopkins Now Newsletter #746: Thursday, January 22nd, 2026.
Today wasn’t a hearing.
It was a reckoning.
Not because the words were seismic…
but because the speaker, Jack Smith…stood in a room full of people desperate not to really hear what he was saying.
And, yet…he said the things that matter most…again and again, under oath…under fire… in front of the American people.
This wasn’t merely testimony.
It was an institutional confession.
He Didn’t Dodge the Core Question: The Evidence Was There
From the moment he opened his mouth, Smith doubled down on something long obvious to anyone paying attention:
“President Trump was charged because the evidence established that he willfully broke the law…the very laws he took an oath to uphold.”
That’s not nuance.
That’s a prosecutor telling the world…exactly why he brought charges…and that he would do so again.
Under repeated questioning, Smith made this point again:
If asked whether to prosecute a former president based on the same facts today, I would do so regardless of whether that president was a Republican or a Democrat.
Notice what that means:
There was no political amateurishness.
No overreach.
No “gotcha.”
There was evidence…and a prosecutor who said clearly twice under oath that he would make the same decision again.
That’s not equivocation.
That’s conviction…on the record.
Smith on the Heart of the Case: Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
Smith repeatedly reminded lawmakers why he charged the president in the first place:
His team developed proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Trump engaged in criminal activity related to the 2020 election efforts.
The evidence showed Trump was “by a large measure the most culpable and most responsible person in this conspiracy.”
The actual attack on January 6 does not happen without him, Smith said…because the conspiracy was driven entirely by Trump’s actions and decisions.
This wasn’t some abstract claim.
This was Smith telling Congress, in public…that the same evidence he had before a grand jury…the same evidence he believes would have led to conviction…still exists and would be used again.
That’s not a prosecutor talking tough.
That’s a prosecutor testifying under oath about what he knows to be true.
Republicans Tried the Same Playbook-and Failed
The Republicans on the committee didn’t come with new evidence.
They came with old talking points:
“You weaponized the Justice Department.”
“You tried to stop President Trump from running.”
“You abused your authority by collecting phone metadata from GOP lawmakers.”
*Election denier Andy Biggs. Biggs also reportedly asked Donald Trump for a Pardon.
But Smith didn’t flinch.
When asked about subpoenaing phone metadata from Republican senators as part of the investigation…including those who pressured officials to overturn the election… Smith defended it as a normal…lawful investigative tool.
He didn’t spin.
He explained.
He didn’t dodge.
He justified with law.
That’s exactly what prosecutors do…when they believe their case.
Democrats Didn’t Throw Flowers; They Articulated the Core Truth
Asked to summarize why Smith pressed charges, Rep. Jamie Raskin didn’t mince words:
“You had the audacity to do your job.”
That wasn’t praise so much as contrast.
In a room where one side questioned the legitimacy of the work, the other side said:
This prosecutor followed facts and law…even when it was unpopular.
And…that is the point that matters most.
Smith’s testimony wasn’t just about what he did…but about why he did it and why he stands by it.
Trump’s Response: From the Air Force to Truth Social
While Smith testified, Trump was elsewhere…not defending…not offering alternative evidence…not addressing legal points….but attacking the messenger.
Trump called Smith a “deranged animal” and demanded Smith’s prosecution.
That’s not argument.
That’s reaction.
That’s not legal counterpoint.
That’s psychological projection.
Because when you lose on facts and law…all you’re left with is fury.
Smith’s Testimony on the Rule of Law-Not Just Politics
Smith didn’t hesitate to articulate the higher stakes:
“No one should be above the law in this country.”
That is the heartbeat of today’s testimony.
Not vendetta.
Not politics.
Not revenge.
Law.
Nothing less.
And under repeated questioning, silence from Republicans…who never produced new evidence…never articulated a legal weakness in Smith’s cases…and instead rewrote their attacks as political talking points…was deafening.
He Did Not Shy Away From What the Evidence Showed
Smith told the committee that:
Trump pressured state officials to reject true vote counts in states he lost.
Trump spread false claims about election fraud to incite his base and disrupt a lawful transfer of power.
Trump’s actions were not protected by the First Amendment when they crossed into criminal conduct.
Trump caused what happened on January 6 and tried to exploit it.
These weren’t abstract assertions.
These were answers to direct questions from lawmakers…responses under oath…delivered publicly.
On Intimidation and Personal Risk
Republicans tried to paint Smith as a political operator.
But Smith responded to personal attacks…with one of the most powerful statements of the hearing:
“I will not be intimidated.”
That’s not bravado.
That’s testimony.
The sitting president…while Smith was on the stand…publicly called for his prosecution and attacked his character.
And Smith…under oath…refused to be cowed.
He Confirmed the Institutional Costs of Telling the Truth
Smith didn’t just testify about evidence.
He testified about consequences.
He told lawmakers that:
Many of his own career prosecutors and FBI agents were fired after Trump returned to office.
Trump’s allies are pursuing investigations into DOJ officials, including referrals for prosecution of staff members.
The political campaign of intimidation against witnesses and prosecutors is real and ongoing.
That’s not a prosecutor whining.
That’s a prosecutor stating observable cause and effect on the record.
What He Couldn’t Say-And Why That Matters
Due to ongoing court orders, Smith could not address most details of the classified documents case…including Volume II of his final report on that prosecution.
Another judge has barred its release for now.
Trump’s lawyers are trying to permanently block that report from ever being released publicly.
Think about that for a moment:
A former president winning an election…erased pending criminal cases…and sealed the record of a prosecutor’s work…even before the public sees it.
That’s not legal process.
That’s power…protecting itself.
The Hearing Wasn’t About One Man. It Was About the Fragility of the Rule of Law
Smith didn’t just defend his decisions.
He defended the principle that
law should be applied equally, regardless of status or office.
That’s a sacred idea.
It’s the idea that no one…literally no one…gets a pass because of who they are.
Yet…that’s exactly what happened:
Charges were dropped not because evidence disappeared
But because a president was reelected and protected by DOJ precedent
The evidence that once proved a case strong enough for indictment now exists in limbo because of political power.
That’s not justice.
That’s suspension.
So What Was Today, Really?
It wasn’t a hearing about law.
It was a moral litmus test for American institutions.
Today, in front of the nation:
A prosecutor testified about hard evidence under oath
Lawmakers questioned him without producing counter-evidence
A president attacked him instead of defending his innocence
Judges sealed crucial documents from public view
And the rule of law was discussed more as a platitude than a practice
That’s what the hearing revealed.
Not just what was said…what was allowed to be said.
This Is the Moment That Should Make You Furious
Not because of partisan politics.
Not because of theater.
But…because the country’s highest ideals…were discussed in a room where most people were more invested in protecting reputations than protecting truth.
*Troy Nehls earlier today. Nehls is a strong supporter and defender of Donald Trump and often backs efforts to dismiss investigations into Trump as politically motivated. Nehls was fired from the Richmond Police Department in 1998 for multiple violations including improper arrests and evidence destruction.
Here’s the cold truth:
Evidence was there.
Smith stands by it.
Republicans never refuted it.
Trump attacked the messenger.
And…yet…the country watched this conversation unfold not as accountability…but as theater.
That’s not oversight.
That’s avoidance.
The Line That Was Crossed Today
Here is the line that was crossed today…quietly…politely…under fluorescent lights:
A prosecutor testified under oath that the evidence was there.
That it met the standard.
That it would have convicted.
That he would do it again.
And the system responded…not by grappling with that truth…but by absorbing it…dulling it…and filing it away as something too dangerous to fully confront.
That should deeply concern you.
Because democracies don’t usually collapse in explosions.
They collapse in hearings like this…
where everyone pretends that restraint is wisdom…
that delay is prudence…
and that silence is stability.
Jack Smith did his job.
The institutions around him…blinked.
They blinked…because they are afraid of what enforcing the law all the way would require.
They blinked…because power now carries consequences truth-tellers are expected to absorb quietly.
They blinked…because they’ve convinced themselves that holding the line is riskier than letting it erode.
History is very clear about what happens next.
When the evidence is strong…
the facts are clear…
the law is sound…
and accountability is still avoided…
it isn’t because the truth is uncertain.
It’s because the system has decided it no longer has the stomach to defend itself.
That is what today revealed.
And once you see that…you can’t unsee it.
The question…now…isn’t whether the evidence existed.
Jack Smith answered that.
The question is whether the country still has the will to act on it.
Because if it doesn’t…
then today won’t be remembered as a hearing.
It will be remembered as the moment everyone knew…
and chose caution anyway.
This isn’t a hearing recap.
This is the accountability America refused to confront today.
And it deserves your full attention.




