The Capital

2nd Republican to join Jan. 6 probe

Ill. Rep. Kinzinger, a Trump detractor, is selected by Pelosi

- By Luke Broadwater

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday appointed Rep. Adam Kinzinger to the special committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, adding a second Republican who is a forceful critic of former President Donald Trump to the panel.

The move, which bolsters the committee’s bipartisan credential­s, came after Pelosi rejected two Republican­s who are among Trump’s most vociferous defenders in Congress from joining, saying their conduct suggested they could not be trusted to participat­e.

Kinzinger, a six-term Illinois congressma­n who has drawn censure from his own party for disavowing Trump and the conspiracy theories the former president perpetuate­d, said in a statement that he had accepted the post.

“While this is not the position I expected to be in or sought out, when duty calls, I will always answer,” said Kinzinger, one of 10 House Republican­s who voted to impeach Trump. “This moment requires a serious, clear-eyed, nonpartisa­n approach. We are duty bound to conduct a full investigat­ion on the worst attack on the Capitol since 1814 and to make sure it can never happen again.”

Pelosi, who has final say over the committee’s membership, has already given one of the eight seats normally reserved for the majority party to Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo.

Cheney was ousted from House leadership in May for criticizin­g Trump and his actions before and during the riot.

About 140 police officers were injured Jan. 6 as Trump loyalists stormed the Capitol, where Congress was meeting to formalize President Joe Biden’s election, chanting “Hang Mike Pence,” stalking the halls looking for Pelosi and forcing lawmakers to evacuate their chambers.

Pelosi began seriously considerin­g unilateral­ly appointing Kinzinger last week after she blocked Reps. Jim Banks, R-Ind., and Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. Both had amplified Trump’s false claims of election fraud, joined their party’s efforts Jan. 6 to challenge Biden’s victory and made statements that undermined the select committee’s work and mission.

Pelosi, however, said she welcomed the three other Republican­s whom Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., had nominated to join the panel.

“We have to ignore the antics of those who do not want to find the truth,” she said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week,” reiteratin­g her rationale for barring Banks and

Jordan.

Her decision to reject the pair drew an angry response from McCarthy, the minority leader, who announced that all his picks would boycott the panel. He has described Pelosi’s interventi­on as confirmati­on that the investigat­ion was nothing more than a political exercise to hurt the GOP.

“Speaker Pelosi’s rejection of the Republican nominees to serve on the committee and self-appointmen­t of members who share her preconceiv­ed narrative will not yield a serious investigat­ion,” he said in a statement Sunday.

On Fox News on Sunday, Banks, who arranged a recent trip to join Trump at the Southweste­rn border, blamed Pelosi for the security breakdowns at the Capitol during the breach by the pro-Trump mob. He claimed, without evidence, that he was rejected from the committee as part of a cover-up.

“At the end of the day, she is ultimately responsibl­e for the breakdown of security at the Capitol that happened on Jan. 6,” he said.

Congressio­nal leaders hire the law enforcemen­t personnel responsibl­e for Capitol security, but they are typically not involved in day-to-day decisions about security protocols.

Security at the Capitol is controlled by the Capitol Police Board, which includes the House and Senate sergeants-at-arms and the architect of the Capitol. At the time of the attack, the House sergeant-at-arms, Paul Irving, had been on the job since 2012, when he was hired under Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. The Senate sergeant-at-arms at the time, Michael Stenger, was hired in 2018 when Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., led the chamber.

Both Irving and Stenger, along with the chief of the Capitol Police at the time, Steven Sund, resigned under pressure after the riot.

Asked about Kinzinger’s potential selection Sunday, Banks pointed to his colleague’s unsparing criticism of Trump: “It’s clear that Pelosi only wants members on this committee who will stick to her talking points and stick to her narrative.”

Kinzinger has urged his fellow Republican­s to reject Trump’s lie of a stolen election and his brand of grievance-based politics.

“For months, lies and conspiracy theories have been spread, threatenin­g our self-governance,” Kinzinger said Sunday.

In her statement appointing Kinzinger to the panel, Pelosi emphasized his military service as an Air Force veteran and lieutenant colonel in the Air National Guard.

“He brings great patriotism to the committee’s mission: to find the facts and protect our democracy,” she said.

There will nine members of the committee seated when the panel has its first hearing Tuesday.

 ?? STEFANI REYNOLDS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rep. Adam Kinzinger, shown in May, who has long urged a rejection of Donald Trump’s falsehoods, said Sunday: “For months, lies and conspiracy theories have been spread, threatenin­g our self-governance.”
STEFANI REYNOLDS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Rep. Adam Kinzinger, shown in May, who has long urged a rejection of Donald Trump’s falsehoods, said Sunday: “For months, lies and conspiracy theories have been spread, threatenin­g our self-governance.”

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