“I can’t imagine being blamed. I’ve done nothing wrong,” Trump told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt. “I don’t think the people of the United States would support that,” Trump added. “And as you know, if that happened, I wouldn’t be banned from running. You know that.” Trump in the interview maintained that he had no involvement in a plot to promote alternate electors in Georgia that would have given him the state despite President Biden winning by thousands of votes, though he insisted the idea was “very common.” Georgia prosecutors have been investigating the scheme and have interviewed Trump associates such as Rudy Giuliani about the matter. The former president has also repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in his handling of classified documents following an FBI search of his Mar-a-Lago estate last month. The agency conducted the investigation months after finding dozens of classified documents at the residence and unsuccessfully trying to get the materials back from Trump. Trump reiterated his claim that he had declassified all the documents he kept at his home more than a year after leaving the White House, although experts doubted he could have done so without going through a more formal process and Trump’s legal team has not argued. court that it declassified the materials. “There’s no reason they can [indict]unless they’re just sick and deranged, which is always possible, because I did absolutely nothing wrong,” Trump said Thursday. Bloomberg launches database targeting racial economic gap. The Hill’s 12:30 report — How a nationwide rail strike was avoided The former president has repeatedly said he does not believe the American public will accept him being impeached, warning there would be “problems” if they were. Hewitt, noting that some would interpret his comments as incitement to violence, asked what kind of problems he was referring to, though Trump did not elaborate. “This is not incitement, I’m just saying what I think,” Trump said. “I don’t think the people of this country will take it.”