Santa Fe New Mexican

CHAOS AT THE CAPITOL

Lawmakers don gas masks, dive for cover during siege

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Congress reconvened in the evening, lawmakers decrying the protests that defaced the Capitol and vowing to finish confirming the Electoral College vote for Biden’s election, even if it took all night. Lawmakers were still at it after midnight.

Vice President Mike Pence, reopening the Senate, directly addressed the demonstrat­ors: “You did not win.”

Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the “failed insurrecti­on” underscore­d lawmakers’ duty to confirm the vote. Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Congress would show the world “what America is made of ” by finishing the count.

Punctuatin­g their resolve, both the House and Senate soundly defeated the first objection — to election results from Arizona — that had been raised by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz. Still, most House Republican­s voted for the objection.

Other objections to results from Georgia, Michigan and Nevada fizzled without adequate support from senators. But an objection to Pennsylvan­ia backed by Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., and Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., forced deliberati­ons. Proceeding­s pushed into the wee hours.

The president gave his supporters a boost into action Wednesday morning at a rally outside the White House, where he urged them to march to the Capitol. He spent much of the afternoon in his private dining room off the Oval Office watching scenes of the violence on television. At the urging of his staff, he reluctantl­y issued a pair of tweets and a taped video telling his supporters it was time to “go home in peace” — yet he still said he backed their cause.

A somber President-elect Biden, two weeks away from being inaugurate­d, said American democracy was “under unpreceden­ted assault, ” a sentiment echoed by many in Congress, including some Republican­s. Former President George W. Bush said he watched the events in “disbelief and dismay.”

The domed Capitol building has for centuries been the scene of protests and occasional violence. But Wednesday’s events were particular­ly astounding both because they unfolded at least initially with the implicit blessing of the president and because of the underlying goal of overturnin­g the results of a free and fair presidenti­al election.

Tensions were already running high when lawmakers gathered early Wednesday afternoon for the constituti­onally mandated counting of the Electoral College results, in which Biden defeated Trump, 306-232. Despite pleas from Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, more than 150 GOP lawmakers planned to support objections to some of the results, though lacking evidence of fraud or wrongdoing in the election.

Trump spent the lead-up to the proceeding­s publicly hectoring Pence, who had a largely ceremonial role, to aid the effort to throw out the results. He tweeted: “Do it Mike, this is a time for extreme courage!”

But Pence, in a statement shortly before presiding, defied Trump, saying he could not claim “unilateral authority” to reject the electoral votes that make Biden president.

In the aftermath, several Republican­s announced they would drop their objections to the election, including Sen. Kelly Loe±er, R-Ga., who lost her bid for reelection Tuesday.

Earlier, protesters had fought past police and breached the building, shouting and waving Trump and American flags as they marched through the halls. Lawmakers were told to duck under their seats for cover and put on gas masks after tear gas was used in the Capitol Rotunda. Some House lawmakers tweeted they were sheltering in place in their offices.

Rep. Scott Peters, D-Calif., told reporters he was in the House chamber when rioters began storming it. Security officers “made us all get down, you could see that they were fending off some sort of assault.” He said they had a piece of furniture up against the door. “And they had guns pulled,” Peters said. Glass panes to a House door were shattered.

The woman who was killed was part of a crowd that was breaking down the doors to a barricaded room where armed officers stood on the other side, police said. She was shot in the chest by Capitol Police and taken to a hospital where she was pronounced dead. City police said three other people died from medical emergencie­s during the long protest on and around the Capitol grounds.

Staff members grabbed boxes of Electoral College votes as the evacuation took place. Otherwise, said Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., the ballots likely would have been destroyed by the protesters.

The mob’s storming of Congress prompted outrage, mostly from Democrats but from Republican­s as well, as lawmakers accused Trump of fomenting the violence with his relentless falsehoods about election fraud.

“Count me out,” said Trump ally Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. “Enough is enough.”

Despite Trump’s repeated claims of voter fraud, election officials and his own former attorney general have said there were no problems on a scale that would change the outcome. All the states have certified their results as fair and accurate, by Republican and Democratic officials alike.

The Pentagon said about 1,100 District of Columbia National Guard members were being mobilized to help support law enforcemen­t at the Capitol. More than a dozen people were arrested.

As darkness fell, law enforcemen­t officers worked their way toward the protesters, using percussion grenades to clear the area around the Capitol. Big clouds of tear gas were visible. Police in full riot gear moved down the steps, clashing with demonstrat­ors.

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 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Capitol Police hold protesters at gunpoint near the House Chamber inside the Capitol.
ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Capitol Police hold protesters at gunpoint near the House Chamber inside the Capitol.

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