Royal Oak Tribune

Shirkey stands by Capitol ‘hoax’ comments

- By David Eggert

LANSING » One of Michigan’s highest-ranking Republican­s on Wednesday stood by his false claims that it is a “hoax” to blame supporters of then-President Donald Trump for the deadly Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

In a private conversati­on with Democratic Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II in the Michigan Senate that was captured by the chamber’s video feed, Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey said: “I frankly don’t take back any of the points I was trying to make” but rather “some of the words I chose.” He said the siege was “very real, but the assignment of cause — that was planned weeks and months in advance.”

Shirkey apologized Tuesday after the release of an hourlong video of a Feb. 3 meeting in which he told Republican­s that the siege at the Capitol “wasn’t Trump people. That’s been a hoax from day one. That was all prearrange­d.” He questioned why there was not more security and suggested the “staged” event was “done from high,” claiming then-U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell “was part of it. ... They wanted to have a

mess.”

The statement did not specify the remarks for which he was apologizin­g, and he did not speak to reporters following the session on Wednesday.

The controvers­y was the latest involving Shirkey and the GOP more broadly in a battlegrou­nd state that Joe Biden won by 153,000 votes but where Trump continues to hold grip. Shirkey came under fire for meeting with paramilita­ry group leaders last year and attending a rally with extremists, weeks after armed men entered the Statehouse to protest Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. Some were later charged ina plot to kidnap the governor. GOP leaders in Hillsdale County, which is in Shirkey’s district, censured him Feb. 4 for backing a ban on the open carry of guns in the Statehouse and his alleged inaction against Whitmer’s COVID-19 orders. Shirkey countered that Republican­s

had “spanked her hard” and he joked about having contemplat­ed inviting Whitmer to a fist fight on the Capitol lawn.

Earlier Wednesday, Shirkey told an activist with the liberal group Progress Michigan that he was saying the hoax was “the fact that it was blamed on Trump. The actual event was very real and very, very unfortunat­e.” He said he would not resign.

Asked if Shirkey should step down, the governor told The Associated Press she is focused on the pandemic.

“I do not have the time or energy to indulge anyone in terms of conspiracy theories or even threats of violence against me personally,” she said. “I’m going to stay focused on my job. Any legislator who actually wants to get these important issues done and wants to show some leadership on those fronts will find a willing partner in me.”

Gilchrist said he found Shirkey’s latest statements “quite disturbing” but also unsurprisi­ng, saying it “connects to the broader rhetoric that he’s been spewing toward the governor.”

“I certainly think there needs to be some accountabi­lity and that’s up to, frankly, his caucus,” he told AP. “That’s up to the Michigan Republican Party to choose if that’s the kind of party they want to be.”

Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial is underway. Democrats say the former president was responsibl­e for inciting the mob who broke into the Capitol and interrupte­d the presidenti­al electoral count. Five people died, including a police officer.

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