Trump collaborates with the January 6 prison choir to release new single ‘Justice for All’ – which dropped before it appeared on CPAC
- Former President Donald Trump collaborated on a song with the J6 Prison Choir titled “Justice For All”
- The members of the choir are those who remain imprisoned for the crimes of January 6
- It was released ahead of Trump’s Saturday night CPAC appearance.
Is a Grammy award in the future for former President Donald Trump?
The former president collaborated on a song with the J6 Prison Choir – members of the MAGA mob who remain imprisoned for their role in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.
The song, titled “Justice for All,” uses Trump’s oral recitation of the Star-Spangled Banner Pledge of Allegiance, with the prisoners chanting “USA” at the end.
It was released Friday on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music and other platforms.
With the song’s release, Trump has new material to play with when he delivers the keynote address at this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference on Saturday night.

Former President Donald Trump, seen at the Ellipse rally ahead of the January 6 Capitol attack, collaborated on a song with the J6 Prison Choir

The song, titled “Justice for All,” uses Trump’s oral recitation of the Star-Spangled Banner Pledge of Allegiance, with the prisoners chanting “USA” at the end.
On Friday, Trump also kicked off the creation of up to 10 new US cities – dubbed “Freedom Cities” – that would have flying cars and lots of babies, as the ex-president pledged to give potential parents ‘bonus baby’ to raise the American birth rate.
In those cities there would be ‘towering monuments to our true American heroes,’ Trump said, recalling the National Garden of American Heroes Trump wanted to build, signing an executive order for its creation days before leaving office.
“These cities of freedom will reopen the border, rekindle the American imagination, and give hundreds of thousands of young people and others, all hard-working families, a new chance at home ownership and, in fact, , the American dream,” he said.
During his speech, Trump will likely continue to portray his supporters involved in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack as political prisoners.
Trump has pledged to give the insurgents a full pardon and government apology if he is re-elected in 2024.
In December, Trump filmed a message for a group that provides legal support to the Jan. 6 defendants.


Not everyone was a fan of Trump’s new song. Robert Maguire, research director of the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics watchdog group in Washington, said he was “repelled” by the song’s existence.
“People have been treated unconstitutionally, in my opinion, and very, very unfairly, and we’re going to get to the bottom of it,” Trump promised. “And you know what I said, I take it very seriously, I’ve never seen anything like it on any level.”
He said during his 2024 run that he planned to look into what he called a “very unfair situation”.
Not everyone was a fan of Trump’s new song.
“I’ve never been more disgusted by the mere existence of a song than the one sung by a president who tried to stage a coup and a literal ‘chorus’ of insurgents who tried to help him” , tweeted Robert Maguire, director of research at the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.
“To be clear, I say this as someone who has heard the Utah House of Representatives rap,” Maguire added, sharing the video of Utah lawmakers in their rendition of “Fresh Prints of BIlls Here”.
