Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Panel: Next hearing shows Trump `derelictio­n of duty'

- By Hope Yen

WASHINGTON » A House committee's prime-time hearing Thursday will offer the most compelling evidence yet of then-President Donald Trump's “derelictio­n of duty” on the day of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, with new witnesses detailing his failure to stem an angry mob storming the Capitol, committee members said Sunday.

“This is going to open people's eyes in a big way,” said Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., a member of the House committee investigat­ing the riot who will help lead Thursday's session with Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Va. “The president didn't do anything.”

After a yearlong investigat­ion, the House Jan. 6 panel is seeking to wrap up what may be its last hearing, even as its probe continues to heat up.

The committee says it continues to receive fresh evidence each day and isn't ruling out additional hearings or interviews with a bevy of additional people close to the president. One such figure is Steve Bannon, whose trial begins this week on criminal contempt of Congress charges for refusing to comply with the House committee's subpoena.

The committee also issued an extraordin­ary subpoena last week to the Secret Service to produce texts by Tuesday from Jan. 5 and Jan. 6, 2021, following conflictin­g reports about whether they were deleted.

But panel members say Thursday's hearing will be the most specific to date in laying out and weaving together previously known details on how Trump's actions were at odds with his constituti­onal legal duty to stop the Jan. 6 riot. Unlike members of the public who generally have no duty to take action to prevent a crime, the Constituti­on requires a president to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.”

“The commander in chief is the only person in the Constituti­on whose duty is explicitly laid out to ensure that the laws are faithfully executed,” Luria said. “I look at it as a derelictio­n of duty. (Trump) didn't act. He had a duty to act.”

Thursday's hearing will be the first in the primetime slot since the June 9 debut that was viewed by an estimated 20 million people.

Luria said the hearing will highlight additional testimony from White House counsel Pat Cipollone and other witnesses, not yet seen before, “who will add a lot of value and informatio­n to the events of that critical time on January 6.” She cited Trump's inaction that day for more than three hours, along with a tweet that afternoon criticizin­g Vice President Mike Pence for lacking courage to contest Democrat Joe Biden's win in the 2020 presidenti­al election that may have served to egg on the mob.

“We will go through pretty much minute by minute during that time frame, from the time he left the stage at the Ellipse, came back to the White House, and really sat in the White House, in the dining room, with his advisers urging him continuous­ly to take action, to take more action,” Luria said.

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