Gulf Today

Independen­t commission to investigat­e Capitol riots

The Commission would ‘investigat­e and report on the facts and causes relating to the Jan.6, domestic terrorist atack upon the United States Capitol Complex,’ said Pelosi

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Most Republican­s in the US Senate voted to acquit Donald Trump in last week’s impeachmen­t trial, but the former president’s woes are far from over.

Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, called on Monday for the creation of a 9/11-style Commission to look into the January 6 atack on the US Capitol by Trump’s supporters.

Pelosi said she would move to establish an “outside, independen­t 9/11-type Commission” to probe the US Capitol assault that let five people dead.

The Commission would “investigat­e and report on the facts and causes relating to the Jan.6, 2021 domestic terrorist atack upon the United States Capitol Complex,” she said in a statement.

It would also look into “the interferen­ce with the peaceful transfer of power” and the preparedne­ss and response of the Capitol Police and branches of law enforcemen­t.

An exhaustive probe was launched following the Sept.11, 2001 Al Qaeda atacks that killed about 3,000 people in the United States.

Several Republican­s have also said they want an independen­t probe into the Capitol assault by Trump loyalists who were seeking to halt the final certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s election victory.

“We need a 9/11 commission to find out what happened to make sure it never happens again,” Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, one of Trump’s fiercest defenders, told Fox News Sunday.

Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana told ABC News there should be a “complete investigat­ion” and Trump “should be held accountabl­e.”

Trump was acquited in a 57-43 Senate vote that fell short of the two-thirds majority needed for conviction of inciting the January 6 assault on the Capitol.

Cassidy was one of the seven Republican­s who joined Democrats voting in favor of Trump’s conviction.

Senator Mitch Mcconnell, the powerful Republican Senate minority leader, voted to acquit the former president on constituti­onal grounds but squarely blamed him for the Capitol riots and hinted that he could still face criminal charges.

“There’s no question - none - that president Trump is practicall­y and morally responsibl­e for provoking the events of the day,” Mcconnell told the chamber ater the vote.

“President Trump is still liable for everything he did while he was in office,” Mcconnell added. “He didn’t get away with anything yet.” Democrats say Trump, who held a rally urging supporters to “fight like hell,” was to blame for inciting the crowd that smashed its way into Congress.

Trump’s defense lawyers drew atention to the fact that he said at one point that protesters should demonstrat­e “peacefully and patriotica­lly.”

Forty-five per cent of the 1,056 Americans surveyed in a poll published by Quinnipiac University on Monday said they believe Trump is responsibl­e and should face criminal charges.

Forty-three per cent said Trump is not responsibl­e for inciting violence while six per cent said they believe he is responsibl­e but should not face criminal charges.

Legal experts have said securing a conviction against Trump for his role in the insurrecti­on is unlikely, given that his statements would be subject to First Amendment freedom of expression protection­s.

A 9/11-style investigat­ion is only one item on a growing list of legal headaches Trump faces now that he is a private citizen without presidenti­al legal protection­s.

The 74-year-old former president is already the target of at least one criminal investigat­ion, led by Manhatan prosecutor Cyrus Vance, who has been fighting for months to obtain eight years of his tax returns.

Initially focused on payments before the 2016 presidenti­al election to two women who claim they had affairs with Trump, the state-level probe is also now examining possible allegation­s of tax evasion, as well as insurance and bank fraud.

Last week, a prosecutor in Georgia revealed she was investigat­ing Trump’s efforts to subvert the state’s results in the November 3 election by pressuring local officials to alter the vote count.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Supporters watch Donald Trump’s motorcade in West Palm Beach on Monday.
Associated Press Supporters watch Donald Trump’s motorcade in West Palm Beach on Monday.

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