Ben Williamson — Meadows Aide
Trump Administration Officials

Ben Williamson — Meadows Aide

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Ben Williamson — Meadows Aide

Category: Government — Trump White House Staff
Role: Senior advisor to White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows
Priority: P2

## Summary

Ben Williamson served as a senior advisor and communications aide to White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. He was closely involved in Meadows’ day-to-day operations during the critical post-election period in late 2020 and through January 6, 2021. As Meadows’ top aide, he had proximity to the chief of staff’s communications and activities during the period when efforts to overturn the election were underway.

## Accountability Status

Current status: Left government after Trump administration

Legal exposure: Potential witness in investigations related to Meadows’ activities; subpoenaed by January 6 Committee


Investigative trail pointers (public records)

Education only — verify independently. Absence of hits is not proof.

Channel Starting points
Federal courts CourtListener / PACER party and attorney searches (spelling variants)
Campaign finance FEC + OpenSecrets for committees and donors tied to documented roles
Corporate / LLC State secretary of state; OpenCorporates for cross-border shells from reporting
Sanctions / PEP OpenSanctions when international business context is already sourced
Contracts / grants USAspending.gov for named entities from investigations

Use public-records-research-specialist, corporate-intelligence-investigator, and public-corruption-ombudsman evidence tiers.


Factual correction requests: If you believe information in this profile is incorrect, please contact factcheck@patriot.university with your name (optional), the specific claim, and any supporting documentation. We review all submissions and correct verified errors promptly.

For Trump Supporters: Questions Worth Considering

Williamson served as the top aide to White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows during the critical post-election period — the weeks between November 3, 2020, and January 6, 2021. This was the period when efforts to overturn the election were being coordinated through the Chief of Staff’s office. He was subpoenaed by the January 6 Committee. The profile is thin on documented individual conduct, reflecting proximity to the center of events rather than a documented independent role.

Here’s a question worth sitting with: Meadows was at the center of efforts to pressure state officials, pressure Vice President Pence, and coordinate the stop-the-steal campaign — all while serving as White House Chief of Staff. Every senior aide to Meadows during this period had direct proximity to those activities. The January 6 Committee found sufficient reason to subpoena Williamson. The question is about institutional accountability: when a senior aide serves in the White House during a documented effort to overturn an election, and is subpoenaed for that reason, what obligation does that create to cooperate with oversight? What did his cooperation or non-cooperation with the subpoena reflect?

Sources

  • January 6 Committee investigation

Last Updated: May 11, 2026


Press Freedom Record

Data sourced from the US Press Freedom Tracker — a project of the Freedom of the Press Foundation. 1 documented incident linked to this individual.

Incident categories: Chilling Statement

2026-05-07 — FBI Director Kash Patel targets press
Category: Chilling Statement
Targeted outlets/institutions: The Atlantic Targeted journalists: Sarah Fitzpatrick (The Atlantic); Elizabeth Williamson (The New York Times) Source: US Press Freedom Tracker

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