Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevadans in Congress decry rioting

- By John Sadler Aversion of this story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com.

Members of Nevada’s congressio­nal delegation and their staffs were unharmed during Wednesday’s insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, each tweeting their shock at the day’s events.

Rep. Mark Amodei, whose district covers Northern Nevada and who is the lone Republican in the delegation, called the day’s events “shameful” and said that “history (was) made today for all the wrong reasons.” He did not mention his fellow Republican, President Donald Trump, who at an early-morning rally urged his supporters to march on the Capitol.

Democratic Rep. Dina Titus, whose district includes much of Las Vegas proper and the Strip, posted that she was sheltering in place after the mob’s storming.

“Lawless domestic terrorists encouraged by the president of the United States are attempting to destroy our democracy,” she said on Twitter. “They will not succeed.”

Though Trump later posted a video on social media telling his supporters to go home, he did not denounce the violence and rioting.

In a later post, the president called the riot a consequenc­e of his election loss and

made their way into the Capitol, parading and hollering through the halls and popping up at the Senate dais and in the House speaker’s office. Some in the crowd outside were shouting “traitors” as officers tried to keep them back. As the breach was taking place, lawmakers, including Vice President Mike Pence, were escorted out of the congressio­nal chambers to safety.

The skirmishes came just shortly after Trump addressed thousands of his supporters, riling up the crowd with his baseless claims of election fraud at a rally near the White House.

“We will not let them silence your voices,” Trump told the protesters.

There is simply no direct historic parallel to Wednesday’s incidents, Green said.

Green says lawmakers were also herded out of their chambers during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, but “when that happened, they looked at each other and said, ‘Wow, we are under attack. We need to come together.’ They did for a while.

There was a great sense of unity.”

That won’t be the case in 2021, especially with Republican lawmakers who continue to side with Trump’s unproven claims and court defeats in cases alleging that the election was unfairly wonbybiden.

The White House was overrun in 1829 by supporters of President Andrew Jackson, who opened the presidenti­al mansion to the public on his inaugurati­on night, Green said. Jackson had to be escorted to safety.

“But that’s not a good comparison (to Wednesday),” Green said. “It’s not like they wanted to take over the White House and install their own guy. They were celebratin­g their own guy.”

Green says there also have been a few “lone ranger attacks” on the U.S. Capitol, such as in 1954 when four Puerto Rican nationalis­ts wounded five members of the House of Representa­tives. The attackers were part of a group calling for Puerto Rico’s independen­ce from the U.S.

More recently, the Weather Undergroun­d set off an explosive in 1971 to protest the U.S. bombing of Laos, and the May 19th Communist Movement bombed the Senate in 1983 in response to the invasion of Grenada. Neither caused any deaths or injuries, but both resulted in hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage and led to tougher security measures.

The most deadly attack on the Capitol occurred in 1998, when a mentally ill man fired at a checkpoint and killed two Capitol Police officers. One of the dying officers managed to wound the gunman, who was arrested and later institutio­nalized. A nearby statue of Vice President John C. Calhoun still bears a bullet mark from the incident.

The “Bonus Army” march of about 40,000 World War I veterans and their families in 1932 descended on Washington, with protesters demanding cash payment for service, which wasn’t scheduled to be delivered until 1945 under the World

War Adjusted Compensati­on Act of 1924. Two protesters were fatally wounded when President Herbert Hoover order the U.S. Army to clear the area.

Green also pointed to the 1970s, when Native American activists took over the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington to protest social issues and standard of living.

Still, there was nothing like Wednesday’s effort — one with the sitting president encouragin­g the chaos.

Even Republican­s are dismayed at the chaotic events.

“January 6, 2021: History made today for all the wrong reasons. Shameful. All our Washington staff are safe,” Rep. Mark Amodei, Nevada’s lone Republican representa­tive in Congress, tweeted.

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