Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

FENCING MATCH

Police, lawmakers battle over keeping barrier up at the Capitol.

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WASHINGTON — Nobody, it seems, wants to keep the security fence around the U.S. Capitol anymore — except the police who fought off the horrific attack on Jan. 6.

Lawmakers call the razor topped fencing “ghastly,” too militarize­d and, with the armed National Guard troops still stationed at the Capitol since a pro-Trump mob laid siege, not at all representa­tive of the world’s leading icon of democracy.

“All you have to do is to see the fencing around the Capitol to be shocked,” Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, DD.C., said in an interview Friday.

How to protect lawmakers, while keeping the bucolic Capitol grounds open to visitors, has emerged as one of the more daunting, wrenching questions from the deadly riot. Not since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has security been so elevated, and the next steps so uncertain, for the Capitol complex.

Five people died after the mob stormed the building trying to stop Congress from certifying President Joe Biden’s election over Republican Donald Trump. The former president was impeached by the House, and acquitted by the Senate, for inciting the insurrecti­on.

The U.S. Capitol Police has asked for the fencing and the National Guard to remain, for now.

Police officers are working grueling round- theclock overtime shifts after being overrun that day, engaging at times in hand-tohand combat with rioters outfitted in combat gear and armed with bats, poles and other weaponry. One

woman was shot and killed by police and an officer died later, among scores of police injured in what officials have said appeared to be a planned and coordinate­d assault.

With warnings of another attack in early March by pro-Trump militants and threats on lawmakers that have nearly doubled since the start of 2021, the police, the Pentagon and lawmakers themselves are wrestling with how best to secure what has been a sprawling campus mostly open to visiting tourists and neighborho­od dog walkers alike.

“The attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6th forever changed how we look at the ‘People’s House,’ ” acting Capitol Police Chief Yogananda Pittman said in written testimony before Congress in February.

She said that even before the 9/11 attacks, security experts, including former chiefs of police, argued that more needed to be done to protect the Capitol complex. “The Capitol’s security infrastruc­ture must change,” Chief Pittman testified.

While some lawmakers say privately they appreciate the heightened security, taking down the protective perimeter and easing the National Guard’s presence is the one issue that appears to be uniting both Democrats and Republican­s in the toxic political environmen­t on Capitol Hill since the deadly riot.

One option that has emerged is for a mobile, retractabl­e barrier that could be put up as needed.

“What we have now, that’s just unacceptab­le to me,” Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic majority whip, told reporters. “It’s just ghastly, it’s an embarrassm­ent. If there’s a better way to protect us, I want to see it. I want to work to get it.”

Lawmakers described their unease at arriving for work each day in what can feel like a war zone. The absence of tourists snapping photos of the Capitol dome or constituen­ts meeting with representa­tives is an emotional loss on top of COVID- 19 restrictio­ns, they said.

 ?? Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press ?? A National Guard member opens a gate in the razor wiretopped perimeter fence around the Capitol to allow another member in at sunrise in Washington on Monday.
Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press A National Guard member opens a gate in the razor wiretopped perimeter fence around the Capitol to allow another member in at sunrise in Washington on Monday.

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