The Telegram (St. John's)

EX-U.S. Capitol cop, rioter’s runs for Congress illustrate divided country

- RICHARD COWAN

ELLICOTT CITY, Maryland - A former U.S. Capitol police officer who defended lawmakers during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack and a man who served time in prison for joining the mob, could both be headed to Congress next year if they succeed in primaries later this month.

Their campaigns for respective Democratic and Republican nomination­s present a split-screen look into a divided nation more than three years after the siege by Donald Trump supporters trying to overturn his election defeat.

The pair - Democrat Harry Dunn in Maryland and Republican Derrick Evans in West Virginia - are seeking their parties’ nomination­s in strongly partisan districts, meaning both could serve together in the House of Representa­tives next year if they prevail in their separate May 14 contests.

Dunn, 40, said he was thrust into politics by what he experience­d on Jan. 6, which he said stoked his concerns about the stability of U.S. democracy.

When he was called to testify to the probe into the attack, Dunn, who is Black, described the way that rioters taunted him with racial slurs as they tried to overturn Democratic President Joe Biden’s election.

“Going forward, it is imperative on us that believe in democracy, that believe in the Constituti­on, to fight for it,” Dunn told Reuters in a Thursday interview near his campaign headquarte­rs in Ellicott City, Maryland.

Some 300 miles (480 km) to the west in West Virginia, Evans, 36, is trying to unseat third-term Republican U.S. Representa­tive Carol Miller, who was among 139 House Republican­s who supported Trump’s bid to overturn the 2020 election result.

Evans, a former teacher who served briefly in the state legislatur­e, was among the throng that illegally entered the Capitol on Jan. 6.

He served three months in prison after pleading guilty to a felony charge of “impeding, obstructin­g or interferin­g with law enforcemen­t during a civil disorder.”

Dunn and Evans both cite the need to defend the U.S. Constituti­on at a moment they say presents great peril for the U.S.

That is where their similariti­es end.

Larry Sabato, head of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, called Jan.

6 “a dividing line that has made our polarizati­on much worse.”

“It’s no surprise that candidates who have a direct connection to such a signal event would be able to parlay their involvemen­t into something else on the public stage,” Sabato said.

If elected, Dunn said, he would want to pass legislatio­n to strengthen voter protection­s, guard election workers from intimidati­on and reduce the influence of corporate campaign contributi­ons.

Reuters asked Dunn if he would be willing to work for legislativ­e compromise­s with Evans if they both were to be elected.

“Absolutely,” he responded. “We’ve got to realize that compromise is what it’s all about. Anytime that one individual gets everything they want, then that’s no longer a democracy. That’s not working for the American people.”

Asked the same question in a phone interview, Evans responded, “I’m not running to make friends. I’m not running to play patty-cake politics. I’m working to kick in the front door and expose the corruption in D.C.”

Dunn, with $3.7 million raised as of March 30, leads in campaign contributi­ons in a crowded field of 22 candidates and has secured the endorsemen­t of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. For Evans’ one-on-one battle against incumbent Miller, he so far has raised $660,745 to her $921,369.*

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