“[Last
night] I say this to my Republican colleagues who are defending the
indefensible: There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone, but your
dishonor will remain.”
So
Representative Liz Cheney (R-WY), vice chair of the House Select Committee to
Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, damned her Republican
colleagues at tonight's first hearing on
the January 6 insurrection.
And
that was only a piece of what we heard tonight.
Calmly,
carefully, convincingly, and in plain, easy to understand language, committee
leaders Bennie Thompson (D-MS) and Cheney placed former president Donald Trump
at the center of an attempt to overturn our democracy. They were very clear
that what happened on January 6 was
an attempted coup, an “attempt to undermine the will of the people.” All
Americans should remember, they reminded us, that on the morning of January 6, Donald Trump
intended to remain president, despite his loss in the 2020 election and his
constitutional obligation to step down in favor of President-elect Joseph R.
Biden, as every president before him had done.
The
committee established that there was no fraud in the 2020 election that would
have changed the results of the election, showing testimony from Trump’s
attorney general Bill Barr that the argument that Trump had won was “bullsh*t.”
The committee presented testimony from other administration figures, including
Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows and his daughter Ivanka, that Trump had
been told repeatedly that he had lost. And yet, even with his inner circle
telling him he had lost, and even with more than 60 failed lawsuits over the
election, Trump continued to lie that he had been cheated of victory.
It
was Trump who “summoned the mob, assembled the mob, and lit the flame” for January 6, the committee says.
Unable to accept his loss and determined to remain in power, Trump organized
and deployed an attack on our democracy.
The
committee established that the attack on the Capitol was not a random,
spontaneous uprising. The rioters came at Trump’s invitation. While they had
been muttering about the results since immediately after the election, it was
Trump’s tweet of December 19, 2020, that
lit the fuse. That night, the former president met with lawyers Sidney Powell
and Rudy Giuliani, former national security advisor Michael Flynn, and others
at the White House. Shortly after the meeting, Trump tweeted that it was
“[s]tatistically impossible to have lost the 2020 election. Big protest in D.C.
on January 6th. Be there,
will be wild!”
Members
of the extremist organizations the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers took Trump’s December 19th tweet
as a call to arms. On December 20, they
began to organize to go to Washington. These radical white supremacists had
taken great pride in Trump’s shout-out in a presidential debate on September 29 that the
Proud Boys should “stand back and stand by.” After that comment, membership in
the Proud Boys had tripled.
Members
of the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers testified that they went to Washington
because Trump personally asked them to. “Trump has only asked me for two
things,” one man testified: “my vote, and he asked me to come on January 6.”
The
committee provided evidence that 250 to 300 Proud Boys arrived in Washington to
stop the counting of the electoral votes. Nick Quested, a documentary filmmaker
working to film the gang, testified that the riot was not spontaneous: the
Proud Boys, who were allegedly in Washington to hear Trump speak, walked away
from the rally at the Ellipse even before then-president Trump spoke, walking
to the Capitol and checking out the police presence there. The Oath Keepers,
too, were in Washington to stop the count and were expecting Trump to invoke
the Insurrection Act, enabling them to fight for him to remain president.
The
groups quite deliberately fought their way into the Capitol in a planned and
coordinated attack. Meanwhile, Trump continued to stoke the crowd’s fury at
then–vice president Mike Pence for refusing to overturn the election in his
role as the person in charge of counting the certified electoral votes. The
rioters stormed the Capitol and went in search of Pence and House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D-CA), their calls for “Oh, Nancy,” echoing like the singsong chant
from a horror movie. When he learned that the rioters were chanting “Hang Mike
Pence,” the president said: “Maybe our supporters have the right idea.” He said
that Pence “deserves it.”
Videos
of the violence outside the Capitol further undercut the attempt of Republicans
to downplay the rioters as “tourists.” Asked by Thompson if any one memory from January 6 stood out
to her, Officer Caroline Edwards, who fought to protect the Capitol, said yes:
the scene of “carnage” and “chaos.” It was like a war scene from the movies,
she said, with officers bleeding on the ground, vomiting. She was slipping in
people’s blood, catching people as they fell. “Never in my wildest dreams did I
think… I would find myself in the middle of a battle,” she said. More than 100
police officers were wounded in the fighting, attacked with cudgels and bear
spray, and at least nine people died then and immediately after.
House
Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) was only one of many people caught up in
the violence to contact Trump and beg him to call off the rioters. Clearly,
Republicans as well as Democrats knew the mob were his people and that they
would respond to his instructions. And yet, he refused. He did nothing to call
out the military or the National Guard to defend the Capitol.
Ultimately,
those requests came from Vice President Pence, in what appears so far to be an
unexplained breakdown in the usual chain of command. Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley testified that Pence was very clear that the
military needed to turn up and fast to “put down this situation.” In contrast,
Meadows talked to Milley not about protecting the Capitol, but to say “we have
to kill the narrative that the vice president is making all the decisions.”
Milley said he saw this as “politics, politics, politics.”
After
the attempt to overturn the election and keep Trump in power had failed,
according to Cheney, Representative Scott Perry (R-PA) and “multiple other
Republican congressmen” tried to get Trump to pardon them for their
participation. While they are now insisting they did nothing wrong, the requests
for a presidential pardon show that they were aware that they were in trouble.
After
the hearing, CNN congressional
correspondent Ryan Nobles talked to Representative Adam Schiff (D-CA), who is
on the committee. “It’s actually a pretty simple story of a president who lost,
who couldn’t stand losing, who cared nothing about the constitution and was
determined to hold on to power and who incited a mob when everything else
failed,” Schiff said.
The
hearing provided some new information about the January
6 coup attempt that had not previously been publicly
available. It also put what we already knew into a clear and compelling
narrative using the words of Trump’s own advisors, including his daughter, and
video previously unseen by the public. That story singled Trump out as the
author of an attack on our democracy and isolated him even from those in his
inner circle in a way that could weaken his influence in his party.
At
the same time, the committee’s presentation was horrifying, reviving the pain
of January 6 and
clarifying it by bringing together the many different storylines that we have
previously seen only in isolation. The timeline juxtaposed the mob violence
with Trump’s own statements about how Pence was letting them down, for example.
It showed Officer Edwards being knocked unconscious while Trump claimed the mob
was made up of “peaceful people… great people,” and described “the love in the
air, I’ve never seen anything like it.”
Pundits
had speculated before tonight’s
televised hearing that it would not make compelling television, but they could
not have been more wrong. The Fox News Channel, some of whose personalities were
involved in the events surrounding January 6,
refused to air the proceedings. Nonetheless, that channel inadvertently proved
just how powerful the hearing was when it ran Tucker Carlson’s show without
commercial breaks, apparently afraid that if anyone began to channel surf they
might be drawn in by the hearing on other channels.
Veteran
reporter Bob Woodward called the evening “historic.” Looking back at the 1954
hearings that destroyed the career of Senator Joe McCarthy by revealing that he
was lying to the American public, Woodward said that tonight’s
event “was the equivalent of the Army-McCarthy hearings."
—Heather Cox Richardson
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