Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pelosi again seeks riot commission

Proposed panel’s members split between both parties

- MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is renewing her push for a bipartisan commission to investigat­e the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrecti­on, floating a new proposal to Republican­s that would evenly split the panel’s membership between the two parties.

Pelosi, D-Calif., first proposed a commission in February that would have had four Republican­s and seven Democrats to “conduct an investigat­ion of the relevant facts and circumstan­ces relating to the domestic terrorist attack on the Capitol.” Republican­s rejected it as inadequate.

The speaker said last week in a letter to colleagues that she had sent a new offer to Republican­s and “we are determined to seek the truth” of Jan. 6, when hundreds of former President Donald Trump’s supporters broke into the Capitol and interrupte­d the certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s victory.

A person familiar with the new proposal said it would create a commission evenly split between Republican­s and Democrats, similar to the panel that investigat­ed the 9/11 terrorist attacks more than 15 years ago. The person was granted anonymity to discuss the text of the offer, which Pelosi presented to her leadership team this week but has not publicly released.

It’s unclear whether the two sides will agree. Some Republican­s allied with Trump have downplayed the severity of the insurrecti­on and think the probe should look more broadly at unrest in the country. It’s a symptom not just of the partisan tensions that run high in Congress, but of a legislativ­e branch reeling from the Trump era, with lawmakers unable to find common ground, or a common set of facts, even after a violent assault on their institutio­n.

The first draft of the bill to create the commission did not mention Trump or his calls for his supporters who broke into the Capitol to “fight like hell” to overturn his election defeat. But Republican­s swiftly decried the broad latitude to investigat­e the causes of the insurrecti­on. They also objected to a series of findings in the bill that quoted FBI Director Christophe­r Wray saying that racially motivated violent extremism, and especially white supremacy, is one of the biggest threats to domestic security.

The Republican­s said the investigat­ion should focus not just on what led to the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on but also on violence in the summer of 2020 during protests over police brutality — a touchstone among some GOP voters and an idea that some Democrats say is a distractio­n from the real causes of the violent attack.

On Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said he’d had no discussion­s with Pelosi. He said the commission needed to have a partisan balance but also the scope of the investigat­ion needed to be broader than just the insurrecti­on.

“We’ve also had a number of violent disturbanc­es around the country last year, and I think we ought to look at this in a broader scope and with a totally balanced 9/11 style commission,” McConnell told reporters.

Feelings about the attack are still raw in the House, where Trump was impeached for “incitement of insurrecti­on” one week after the attack. The former president was acquitted by the Senate in February.

Pelosi and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., haven’t even been able to agree on whether the Republican­s have been sent the proposal. Pelosi said in her letter Friday that ” we have once again sent a proposal for such a Commission to the Republican­s,” but a spokesman for McCarthy said Wednesday that neither the Republican leader nor his staff have received Pelosi’s latest proposal.

McCarthy’s office said in a statement that “hopefully the Speaker has addressed our basic concerns of equal representa­tion and subpoena authority” for Republican­s on the panel.

Pelosi has said repeatedly that she will not concede to the Republican demands on the scope.

“It’s not about examining Black Lives Matter,” Pelosi said last week. “It’s about what happened on Jan. 6 and how we can prevent it from happening again.”

As the commission has so far failed to gain traction, Pelosi has instructed several House committees to investigat­e different aspects of the siege. She has also said that a new select committee to probe the attack is “among the possibilit­ies.”

Still, she said, “I would rather have a 9/11-type commission.”

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