WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION — If you're extremely online, you've seen the meme: a balding man, staring sadly into the camera, and a mock headline above it that reads "Heartbreaking: The Worst Person You Know Just Made A Great Point." The ClickHole article that accompanies the headline is a joke about the strange sensation of hearing a colleague whose politics you abhor make "an amazing and insightful comment." And this meme became real for Democrats this week, thanks to Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.). Brooks is the picture of a Donald Trump booster, voting with the former president nearly 90 percent of the time. His exhortation for the then-president's backers to "start taking down names and kicking ass" at the rally that preceding the insurrection on Jan. 6, 2021, was intense enough to prompt a civil lawsuit from Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.). That didn't stop Trump from yanking his endorsement of Brooks to become Alabama's next senator after the Southern conservative flailed in the polls and publicly turned his focus away from questioning President Joe Biden's 2020 victory. To add insult to injury (though perhaps not unexpectedly), Brooks got the news of Trump's turnaround from a reporter's tweet rather than from the man himself. Brooks was peeved enough by that to make — wait for it — a great point for Democrats: He revealed publicly that not only had Trump asked Brooks to "rescind the 2020 elections," negating Biden's victory, but also that Trump had done so during the last six months. Democrats benefit from this in two distinct but important ways. First, as our Kyle Cheney pointed out minutes after Brooks got in touch to clarify the timing of Trump's entreaties, Brooks' version of events reinforces the Democrat-led Jan. 6 select panel's perspective that Trump "asked his allies to cast aside the law and Constitution in service of his bid to remain in or return to power." Trump's defense against any suggestion that he conspired to obstruct congressional certification of his loss will likely lie in whatever advice he was getting at the time to keep fighting, that baseless claims of widespread voter fraud could be proven. If Trump was indeed leaning on Brooks as recently as this fall to keep pushing for overturning a democratically administered election, that would underscore the select panel's portrayal of an ousted president determined to disrupt his own defeat by any means necessary. In other words: A president who was simply relying on the legal advice of John Eastman and other aides, who argued before Biden's inauguration that Vice President Mike Pence could stop the certification of Biden's election, would not still be trying to unseat Biden nine months later, after the aides' arguments were publicly eviscerated. The second benefit Brooks has delivered to Democrats — and to Trump's opponents inside the Republican Party — is purely political, not legal or investigative. Without his long-held megaphone on traditional social media, the cracks in Trump's GOP throne are starting to show. Brooks isn't the first candidate he's endorsed who is lagging in primaries. His portrayal of Trump as still fixated on undoing Biden's victory only adds to a perception that the former president is stuck in the past, while the rest of the GOP pushes forward, toward a takeover of one or even both chambers of Congress. As valuable as Trump's base has proven, the former president is becoming something of a walking wedge between Republicans in Congress at a time when they need to project unity above all. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight's author at eschor@politico.com, or on Twitter at @eschor.
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