San Antonio Express-News

There must be reckoning for the Capitol riot

- EUGENE ROBINSON

One year ago, ours was a nation on the brink. We must never forget.

The first week of 2021 brought an unpreceden­ted rupture in the democratic process that Americans have taken for granted since the election of John Adams in 1796. A sitting president, Donald Trump, was trying desperatel­y to remain in office despite his defeat in a free and fair election. He summoned a mob to Washington as an intimidati­ng show of force, and that violent mob — whipped into a frenzy by Trump and his cronies — stormed the Capitol to prevent Congress from certifying Trump’s loss.

Much has happened since, both domestical­ly and in foreign affairs. Now, as then, the biggest factor in most Americans’ dayto-day lives is the disruption caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic. And the leadership of the Republican Party dearly wants us to forget that the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on ever took place.

But the nation cannot just “move on” from such an attack on our constituti­onal order. Not since 1814, when British soldiers marched into Washington, had the Capitol been overrun and pillaged. Not even during the Civil War was the orderly transfer of presidenti­al power disrupted. Never had a defeated presidenti­al candidate — much less a defeated incumbent who had sworn to defend the Constituti­on — refused to accept the result of an election.

We need to know everything that is knowable about these events. And those who inspired, organized and committed the insurrecti­on need to be brought to justice.

Trump and the GOP — his GOP, make no mistake — have been trying to make the insurrecti­on into a partisan issue. Don’t let them.

The mob threatened to “hang” Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence, after Pence announced that he would do his constituti­onal duty and certify Biden’s electoral victory. The senators, House members, staff aides and other Capitol workers forced to flee for their lives or shelter in terror belonged to both parties. And if you surveyed the political beliefs of the scores of police officers who were clubbed, beaten, doused with bear spray and abused with racist slurs by the mob, I wager you’d find as many conservati­ves as progressiv­es.

What happened last Jan. 6 was much bigger and more important than politics. And holding accountabl­e the perpetrato­rs of this attack on our democracy must take precedence over any political concerns. This is bigger than who wins the midterm elections or who runs for president in 2024. This project of reckoning is about the continuati­on of the American experiment.

Actually, there are three simultaneo­us accountabi­lity projects whose success the American people must demand.

The House select committee investigat­ing the attack (appointed by Pelosi only after Republican­s refused to form a proper blue-ribbon commission) appears to be doing an admirable job of collecting new informatio­n, including about Trump’s actions that day. The committee must not let stonewalli­ng by Trump and his inner circle cause delay — a full year has already passed. It is good that the committee plans to issue an interim report this summer but, in the meantime, it should hold public hearings and release as much informatio­n as possible. Their work is not just important but also urgent.

Simultaneo­usly, Congress as a whole must shore up the weaknesses in our transfer-of-power process exposed by the insurrecti­on. The mob’s aim was to halt the official counting of electoral votes — and the mob succeeded, at least for several hours. Even the libertaria­n Cato Institute agrees that the 1876 Electoral Count Act is “a mess of ambiguitie­s and contradict­ions” and needs to be reformed. Legislatio­n to do so should begin making its way toward Biden’s desk.

Meanwhile, the Justice Department must continue to press criminal charges against the insurrecti­onists. It is not enough to prosecute and sentence those who participat­ed bodily in the assault. The puppet masters who assembled the crowd and sent it off to sack the Capitol must be held to account as well.

And no one, including Trump, can be considered above the law.

 ?? Matt Mcclain / Washington Post ?? The leadership of the Republican Party dearly wants us to forget that the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on ever took place. But the nation cannot just “move on” from such an attack on our constituti­onal order.
Matt Mcclain / Washington Post The leadership of the Republican Party dearly wants us to forget that the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on ever took place. But the nation cannot just “move on” from such an attack on our constituti­onal order.
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