Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hearing on Jan. 6 violence exposes partisan divisions

- BY ERIC TUCKER AND MICHAEL BALSAMO

WASHINGTON — Republican­s sought to rewrite the history of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on during a rancorous congressio­nal hearing Wednesday, painting the Trump supporters who attacked the Capitol as patriots harassed by law enforcemen­t and downplayin­g repeatedly the violence of the day.

Democrats, meanwhile, clashed with Donald Trump’s former Pentagon chief about the unprepared response to a riot that began when hundreds of Trump loyalists bent on overturnin­g the election broke through police barriers, smashed windows and laid siege to the building.

The colliding lines of questionin­g, and a failure to settle on a universall­y agreed-upon set of facts, underscore­d the challenges Congress faces as it sets out to investigat­e the violence and government missteps. The House Oversight Committee hearing unfolded just after Republican­s in the chamber removed Rep. Liz Cheney from her leadership post

for rebuking Trump for his claims of election fraud and his role in inciting the attack.

Former acting Defense Secretary Christophe­r Miller and former acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen, testifying publicly for the first time about Jan. 6, tried to defend their respective agencies’ responses to the chaos. But the hearing almost immediatel­y devolved into partisan bickering about how that day unfolded, with at least one Republican stating there wasn’t an insurrecti­on at all.

“I find it hard to believe the revisionis­t history that’s being offered by my colleagues on the other side,” Rep. Stephen Lynch, a Massachuse­tts Democrat, proclaimed in exasperati­on. Other Democrats made similar accusation­s, with Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland urging his Republican colleagues to stop with the “evasions” and “distractio­ns.”

The violence of that day is well-establishe­d, particular­ly after an impeachmen­t trial that focused on the clashes between rioters and police that left officers beaten and bloodied, including one who was crushed between a door and another shocked with a stun gun before he had a heart attack. Some of the insurrecti­onists threatened to hang then-Vice President Mike Pence and menacingly called for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in an apparent effort to find her.

But Republican lawmakers on the committee sought to refocus the hearing’s attention away from those facts, repeatedly equating the insurrecti­on with violence in American cities last summer that arose from racial justice protests that they said Democrats had failed to forcefully condemn. Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona played video footage of violence outside the federal courthouse while Rep. Andrew Clyde of Georgia said that while “there were some rioters” on Jan. 6, it was a “bald-faced lie” to call it an insurrecti­on.

In ways that clearly rewrote the facts of the day and the investigat­ions that resulted, Rep. Paul Gosar of Arizona said the Justice Department was “harassing peaceful patriots.” He described a California woman who was fatally shot by an officer during the insurrecti­on after climbing through the broken part of a door as having been “executed,” even though prosecutor­s have said the officer won’t be prosecuted because the shooting did not break the law.

“It was Trump supporters who lost their lives that day, not Trump supporters who were taking the lives of others,” said Rep. Jody Hice of Georgia, overlookin­g that loyalists to the president instigated the riot, smashing through windows and spraying officers with pepper and bear spray.

Democrats bristled at the Republican characteri­zation of the violence, with Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts saying: “This was a violent white supremacis­t mob who assaulted the nation’s Capitol. It was a deadly and dangerous insurrecti­on that was incited by Donald Trump.”

One Capitol Police officer who was injured while confrontin­g rioters suffered a stroke and died a day later of natural causes. Dozens more were severely injured, some of whom may never return to duty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States