Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Capitol riot panel forming, Pelosi says

Select committee in works after Senate blocks commission

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., announced Thursday that the House will form a select committee to investigat­e the January attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, a month after Senate Republican­s blocked an effort to form an independen­t, bipartisan commission.

“This morning, with great solemnity and sadness, I’m announcing that the House will be establishi­ng a select committee on the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on,” Pelosi said at a news conference, describing the day of the attack as “one of the darkest days in our nation’s history,” and saying the “terror and trauma” to the congressio­nal members and staffers is something she cannot forgive.

“It is imperative that we establish the truth of that day and ensure that an attack of that kind cannot happen and that we root out the causes of it all,” she said.

The panel will investigat­e the facts and causes of the insurrecti­on and will provide recommenda­tions to help prevent similar attacks in the future, Pelosi said. She did not say who will lead or

serve on the committee.

Senate Republican­s last month blocked the creation of an independen­t commission, despite 35 House Republican­s having endorsed the effort. That commission would have been modeled after a panel formed in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and would have been responsibl­e for producing an objective account of what fueled the day’s violence.

Pelosi said she preferred to have an independen­t panel, but she said Congress could not wait any longer to begin a deeper look at the insurrecti­on.

About 10,000 people laid siege to the Capitol on Jan. 6, and nearly 800 of them broke into the building as they tried to stop the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s presidenti­al election victory.

The events of the day resulted in five deaths, and nearly 140 officers were assaulted as they faced rioters armed with ax handles, bats, metal batons, wooden poles, hockey sticks and other weapons, authoritie­s said.

On Wednesday, an Indiana woman became the first person sentenced in the riot. Anna Morgan-Lloyd, 49, pleaded guilty to a misdemeano­r count of demonstrat­ing inside the Capitol; she was sentenced to three years of probation and must perform 40 hours of community service and pay $500 in restitutio­n.

PATH TO PARTISANSH­IP

In recent weeks, a smattering of House and Senate panels have been looking into the events of Jan. 6, holding public hearings with law enforcemen­t and military officials and, in one case, publishing a comprehens­ive report examining why authoritie­s were unable to control the crowd.

The select committee — which will require a majority vote in the Democratic-led House to be formed — is a signal that Pelosi wants to centralize those investigat­ions in one body equipped with subpoena power and that would publish its findings.

But a select committee is all but guaranteed to be more partisan than an independen­t commission — meaning the parties may come no closer to a consensus about why Jan. 6 happened and who is to blame.

It is not clear how large Pelosi’s planned panel will be or how the seats on it will be distribute­d, nor when she will call for the panel to publish its findings. Pelosi said Thursday that the timeline “will be as long as it takes for them — the time they need to do the investigat­ion of the causes of this.”

“There are two actual paths,” the speaker said. “One is about the root causes of it — the white supremacy, the antisemiti­sm, the Islamophob­ia, all the rest of it that was so evident … . The other is the security of the Capitol and what it means to be ready for such an insurrecti­on.”

She said that while authoritie­s “could have been better prepared” for that day’s events, “I don’t think anybody would have foreseen an insurrecti­on incited by the president of the United States.”

Republican lawmakers who voted against the creation of an independen­t commission openly worried that its product might hurt the GOP in the 2022 midterm elections. But the commission would have had a deadline of the end of this year to produce a report; it is far from certain that a select committee would have to function on as tight a timeline.

It is also unclear how many witnesses a select committee will be able to depose.

House Democrats had hoped that an independen­t commission would be able to compel testimony from people who were in the highest ranks of government, including then-President Donald Trump and the top advisers who were with him that day. But it is unlikely those individual­s will respond to a subpoena issued by Democrats without a lengthy court fight.

Asked Thursday whether Democrats might seek to compel House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., to testify about his conversati­on with Trump the day of the insurrecti­on, Pelosi declined to say.

“I’m not going into what the committee will do; that’s up to the committee to make their determinat­ion,” she told reporters. “But it is clear that the Republican­s are afraid of the truth.”

If he testifies, McCarthy is likely to be asked about his Jan. 6 phone call with Trump — a conversati­on he has described to others as distressin­g. A shaken McCarthy reportedly asked Trump to help calm his supporters who had broken into the Capitol that afternoon, with some of them threatenin­g to hang Vice President Mike Pence and physically harm Pelosi.

Trump seemed uninterest­ed, according to a statement from Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, R-Wash., who talked to McCarthy about the call.

NO LONGER PRESIDENT

As president, Trump managed repeatedly to stymie Democrats’ plans to seize documents from his administra­tion and interview his aides. As an ex- president, he no longer has the power to claim executive privilege over testimony, but he is unlikely to be suddenly cowed into adopting a less-litigious stance to accommodat­e a probe.

The Democratic-led House impeached Trump over incitement of the riot. While 57 senators — including seven Republican­s — ultimately voted that he was guilty of those charges, the body fell short of the 67 votes needed to convict him.

In 2012, the then- GOPled House establishe­d a select committee to look into the ambush that led to the deaths of four Americans at U.S. outposts in Benghazi, Libya. But the investigat­ion soon descended into a tool to lob attacks at then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for using a private email server to conduct official business — a story line that dogged her throughout her failed 2016 presidenti­al bid against Trump.

During that campaign cycle, McCarthy, then the House’s second-highest-ranking Republican, bragged that the committee had helped hamstring Clinton’s candidacy. McCarthy is now the House minority leader, and he opposed the proposal for an independen­t commission in this instance.

The parties have only dug in more deeply behind partisan lines on questions regarding Trump’s guilt or even when it comes to funding improvemen­ts to Capitol security. A bill to direct $1.9 billion in new security ventures — and paying debts to the National Guard and others that responded to the riot — is still waiting for Senate action after barely scraping by in the House, on a 213-to-212 vote last month.

Many Republican­s have made clear that they want to move on from the Jan. 6 attack, brushing aside unanswered questions about the insurrecti­on, including how the government and law enforcemen­t missed intelligen­ce leading up to the rioting and the role of Trump before and during the attack.

Some have gone so far as to play down the violence, with one suggesting the rioters looked like tourists and another insisting that a Trump supporter named Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed that day while trying to break into the House chamber through a window, was “executed.”

Last week, 21 Republican­s voted against giving medals of honor to the U.S. Capitol Police and the Metropolit­an Police to thank them for their service on Jan. 6. Dozens of those officers suffered injuries, including chemical burns, brain injuries and broken bones.

 ?? (AP/Alex Brandon) ?? “It is imperative that we establish the truth of that day and ensure that an attack of that kind cannot happen and that we root out the causes of it all,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday in Washington.
(AP/Alex Brandon) “It is imperative that we establish the truth of that day and ensure that an attack of that kind cannot happen and that we root out the causes of it all,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday in Washington.

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