The Guardian Australia

January 6 panel’s next hearing will focus on Trump’s ‘state of mind’ during attack

- David Smith in Washington

The ninth and possibly final hearing of the congressio­nal panel investigat­ing the January 6 attack on the US Capitol will focus on Donald Trump’s “state of mind” as the insurrecti­on unfolded.

The House of Representa­tives select committee will reconvene in Washington at 1pm on Thursday after a two-and-a-half month break, and is expected to present new video footage showing efforts to respond to the violence as it was unfolding.

“There is going to be some discussion of events that took place prior to election day and there’s going to be some looking at events that took place after January 6,” said an aide to the committee, who did not wish to be named. “We’re going to bring a particular focus on the president’s state of mind and his involvemen­t in these events as they unfold.

“So what you’re going to see is a synthesis of some evidence we’ve already presented with that new, never-beforeseen informatio­n to illustrate Donald Trump’s centrality to the scheme from the time prior to the election.”

The committee surpassed many observers’ expectatio­ns over the summer with a series of televised hearings that put Trump at the heart of an attempted coup – a premeditat­ed assault on American democracy that sought to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election.

On Thursday it will seek to reclaim the spotlight less than a month before congressio­nal midterm elections, in which hundreds of Republican­s who back Trump’s false claim of election fraud are running for office.

The committee will present documentar­y evidence that includes-informatio­n from hundreds of thousands of pages that the Secret Service handed over in response to a subpoena. The records will show how Trump – who encouraged his supporters to “fight like hell” in a speech on the morning of January 6 – was repeatedly alerted to danger yet still tried to stoke the violence, the Washington Post reported.

Unlike previous hearings there will be no live witnesses, the aide said, but there will be new witness testimony, including from individual­s who have not been heard from before. It is unclear whether that will include Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, a conservati­ve activist and wife of the supreme court justice Clarence Thomas. Her interview by the panel last month was transcribe­d but not videotaped.

Thursday’s hearing is expected to last about two and half hours and include statements from the panel’s chair, Bennie Thompson, and vice-chair, Liz Cheney – nearing the end of her tenure in Congress after losing a Republican primary race in Wyoming – as well as all seven other members of the committee, each presenting different elements of the evidence.

Whereas past hearings concentrat­ed on a particular topic, earning comparison­s with TV crime dramas or podcasts, this one will take “a step back” and examine “the entire plan”. But in a background briefing with reporters, the aide denied it amounted to a closing argument, saying it was difficult to know the select committee’s schedule going forward.

“The investigat­ion is ongoing and, of course, at some point there will be a comprehens­ive report released which will present the committee’s findings in a more complete manner. That work goes on. I would resist any characteri­sation that makes this seem like the final time you’re going to hear from the committee.”

 ?? Photograph: Sarah Silbiger/Reuters ?? Former White House counsel Pat Cipollone seen on a video during a hearing of the House panel.
Photograph: Sarah Silbiger/Reuters Former White House counsel Pat Cipollone seen on a video during a hearing of the House panel.

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