Las Vegas Review-Journal

House GOP reverses course on Jan. 6 footage

- By Justin Papp Cq-roll Call (TNS)

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s will no longer blur the faces of Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol rioters in security footage posted online, Speaker Mike Johnson announced Friday.

The decision reverses an earlier call to protect the identities of those who participat­ed in the pro-trump mob attack aimed at stopping the certificat­ion of election results. The House Administra­tion Committee, which took possession of all Jan. 6-related materials at the beginning of this Congress, has been publishing footage from the attack on Rumble, the streaming platform known for its popularity among right-wing users. An additional 5,000 hours of footage was set to be released.

“Upon extensive further consultati­on with the committee, and at my direction, the committee will no longer plan to blur the faces of individual­s in the footage given the significan­t logistic hurdles involved and the importance of getting this work completed as responsibl­y and efficientl­y as possible,” Johnson said in a statement.

Since taking over the speakershi­p in October, Johnson has partnered with Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-GA., to start fulfilling a Republican promise to make security footage public. With the raw footage available, people can decide for themselves what happened that day, Loudermilk has argued.

“My subcommitt­ee’s investigat­ion has always been about providing the American people with full transparen­cy about January 6th,” Loudermilk posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, on Friday.

Loudermilk, who chairs the House Administra­tion subpanel that has launched a reinvestig­ation of the Capitol attack, has targeted the Jan. 6 Select Committee convened in the previous Congress under Democratic leadership. He has questioned the findings and motives of that select committee, which held a series of high-profile televised hearings depicting the violence and chaos perpetrate­d by the pro-trump mob.

Meanwhile, Democrats, and some Republican­s, have lampooned his effort, claiming it’s part of a broader Republican attempt — led by former President Donald Trump — to rewrite history.

“It wasn’t a tourist visit,” said Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-miss., who chaired the select committee, in December. “It wasn’t anything other than individual­s who our committee found were prompted by President Trump to do exactly what they did.”

Despite the Republican promise to make footage public, more than a year later, its release online has come in dribs and drabs.

Former Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, initially made the footage available only to then-fox News host Tucker Carlson.

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