Times-Herald (Vallejo)

On Jan. 6, White supremacis­ts. Now comes the whitewash

- DAna Milbank — Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank

On Jan. 6 came the white supremacis­ts.

Now comes the whitewash.

FBI Director Christophe­r A. Wray, appearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday to answer questions about the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, told the lawmakers what should be obvious to all: that “militia violent extremists” and “racially motivated extremists” were behind the insurrecti­on, and that there is no evidence of “fake Trump supporters” or “antifa” having any role in the attack, as Republican officials have suggested. In general, the Trump-appointed Wray testified, white supremacis­ts are the “biggest chunk” of the domestic terrorism threat and “the most lethal.”

But to hear the Republican­s tell it, the country is besieged by left-wing anarchists.

“There has been 280 arrests as a result of the Jan. 6 attack, compared to more than 1,000 arrests as a result of riots just in Portland last year,” argued Sen. Chuck Grassley (Iowa), the top Republican on the panel — as if violence tied to last summer’s racial justice protests in Oregon is the same as an attack on the U.S. seat of government to overturn the election. Grassley went on at length: “holding the ‘A’ symbol for antifa” ... “an admitted antifa adherent” . . . “antifa rioters.”

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, RTenn., wanted to make sure the FBI was “tracking extremist groups like antifa or other radicalism that are connected to violence in cities across the country.”

And Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., who helped to foment the Capitol attack with his effort to overturn the electoral college results, proclaimed that “we have seen massive rioting and violence as extremists, many of them leftist extremists, took to the streets,” part of an “ongoing pattern of domestic terrorism.”

Even after Wray said the FBI had found no sign of antifa or anarchist involvemen­t in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Tex., took issue with “the narrative” of who was involved on Jan. 6 — and again suggested that anarchists played a role.

The attempt to muddy the waters with the largely imaginary threat of antifa serves to shift the focus from the real and present danger of white-supremacis­t violence. Grassley, grudgingly acknowledg­ing that “white supremacy movements may be considered the most dangerous at a given time,” cited everpresen­t “left-wing threats” and asked for the FBI to “make your left-wing anarchist extremism program as robust as your white supremacy and militia extremism program.”

Key to the effort is to derail plans for a 9/11-style commission to probe the Jan. 6 attacks.

Republican leaders haven’t responded to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s request for their input on a draft proposal for such a commission two weeks ago. Instead, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., last week poured cold water on the “partisan” idea and called for an investigat­ion into “the full scope of political violence.”

In short, Republican­s want to turn the Capitol insurrecti­on commission into an antifa commission — and to paint over the events of Jan. 6 with a coat of false equivalenc­ies.

Yet Democrats might be smart to oblige them.

Jamie Gorelick, one of the Democratic appointees to the 9/11 commission, reminded me that it, too, was born amid fierce partisansh­ip. President George W. Bush didn’t want a commission, and a joint House and Senate intelligen­ce probe failed to make much headway.

Gorelick says as long as both sides agree to appoint only former officials who have no interest in holding future elected or Senate-confirmed office. If they get that part right, it won’t matter if the commission’s mandate is Jan. 6 or broader political violence, Gorelick argued. “They’ll look at the facts,” she said, and they’ll see what is objectivel­y true: that political violence on the left is “not as consequent­ial” as the danger from the right.

And — who knows? — the commission­ers might confound the GOP leaders who appointed them by following the facts.

The Attempt to muddy the wAters with the lArgely imAginAry threAt of AntifA serves to shift the foCus from the reAl And present dAnger of whitesupre­mACist violenCe.

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