Monterey Herald

Painful questions after siege of the Capitol by mob

- By Lisa Mascaro and Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON >> The violent siege of the Capitol by President Donald Trump’s supporters forced painful new questions across government on Thursday — about his fitness to remain in office for two more weeks, the ability of the police to secure the complex and the future of the Republican Party in a post-Trump era.

In the immediate aftermath, the attack on the world’s iconic dome of democracy reinforced lawmakers’ resolve to stay up all night to finish counting the Electoral College vote confirming that Democrat Joe Biden won the presidenti­al election.

But the rampage that shocked the world and left the country on edge prompted lawmakers

to launch a congressio­nal review of the U. S. Capitol Police’s failure to stop the the breach and is forcing a broader reckoning over Trump’s tenure in office and what comes next for a torn nation.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that any remaining day with the president in power could be “a horror show for America.” Likewise, Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said the attack on the Capitol was “an insurrecti­on against the United States, incited by the president,” and Trump must not stay in office “one day” longer.

Pelosi and Schumer called for invoking the 25th Amendment to the Constituti­on to force Trump from office before Biden is inaugurate­d on Jan. 20. In fact, Schumer said he and Pelosi tried to call Pence early Thursday to discuss that option but were unable to connect with the vice president.

At least one Republican lawmaker joined them. The procedure allows for the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet to declare the president unfit for office. The vice president then becomes acting president.

Pelosi said if the president’s Cabinet does not swiftly act, the House may proceed to impeach Trump.

Meanwhile, other Republican­s who echoed Trump’s false claims of a fraudulent election, including rising stars and some party leaders, faced angry, unsettled peers —- but also those cheering them on.

With tensions high, the Capitol shuttered and lawmakers not scheduled to return until the inaugurati­on, an uneasy feeling of stalemate settled over a main seat of national power as Trump remained holed up at the White House.

The social media giant Facebook banned the president from its platform and Instagram for the duration of Trump’s final days in office, if not indefinite­ly, citing his intent to stoke unrest. Twitter had silenced him the day before.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said “the shocking events of the last 24 hours” make it clear Trump “intends to use his remaining time in office to undermine the peaceful and lawful transition of power.”

The head of the U. S. Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund faced pressure from Schumer, Pelosi and others in Congress to resign. The sergeants at arms of the House and Senate that oversee the police and security at the complex were expected to be removed.

Sund defended his department’s response to the storming of the Capitol, saying that officers had “acted valiantly when faced with thousands of individual­s involved in violent riotous actions.”

In his first public comment on the mayhem, Sund said in a statement that rioters attacked Capitol police and other law enforcemen­t officers with metal pipes, discharged chemical irritants and “took up other weapons against our officers.”

It was “unlike any I have ever experience­d in my 30 years in law enforcemen­t here in Washington, D.C.,” said Sund, a former city police officer.

But Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser called the police response “a failure.”

Lawmakers from both parties pledged to investigat­e law enforcemen­t’s actions and questioned whether a lack of preparedne­ss allowed a mob to occupy and vandalize the building.

Black lawmakers, in particular, noted the way the mostly white Trump supporters were treated.

Urged on by Trump during a rally near the White House earlier in the day Wednesday to head to Capitol Hill, protesters swiftly broke through police barriers, smashed windows and paraded through the halls, sending lawmakers into hiding.

The protesters ransacked the place, taking over the House and Senate chambers and waving Trump, American and Confederat­e flags. Outside, they scaled the walls and balconies in their breach of the building.

Newly elected Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., said if “we, as Black people did the same things that happened .... the reaction would have been different, we would have been laid out on the ground, there would have been, there would have been shootings, there would have been people in jail.”

One protester, a white woman, was shot to death by Capitol Police, and there were dozens of arrests. Three other people died after “medical emergencie­s” related to the breach.

Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., a former police chief, said it was “painfully obvious” that Capitol police “were not prepared” for what took place.

Rep. Tim Ryan, D- Ohio, who is the chairman of a subcommitt­ee that oversees the Capitol police budget, announced the new review and suggested there would be leadership changes on the force.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Capitol police officers stand outside of fencing that was installed around the exterior of the Capitol grounds in Washington on Thursday.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Capitol police officers stand outside of fencing that was installed around the exterior of the Capitol grounds in Washington on Thursday.

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