The Columbus Dispatch

Democracy paying price for Capitol riots

A year later, the Jan. 6 ringleader­s basically escaping without consequenc­e

- Catherine Rampell

A year later, no consequenc­es. None. Zip. Zilch.

Exactly one year after the attempted coup on Jan. 6, the most senior people responsibl­e have yet to be held accountabl­e. Some of the low-level rioters have been charged and sentenced, often without much or any prison time. That’s still far more punitive than anything experience­d by their political ringleader­s, including former president Donald Trump, the White House aides and outside advisers who coordinate­d his attempt to overturn the will of the voters and the 147 GOP lawmakers who voted against certifying the election’s legitimate results.

Arguably the worst punishment any of them has faced so far has been banishment from Twitter.

Not incarcerat­ion; not removal from office; not official censure; not even a fine. Just getting booted from social media platforms.

The public image of the political party they lead hasn’t suffered, either. Instead, “There is no lasting stain on the Republican brand” from Jan. 6, reports Morning Consult.

As of mid-december, according to a Morning Consult-politico survey, 34% of voters said the Republican Party is “going in the right direction.” That’s 10 percentage points higher than the share saying this immediatel­y after the attack last January.

While being affirmed by a third of voters may not seem like a ringing endorsemen­t, note that this figure is exactly equal to the share of voters who say the Democratic Party is headed in the right direction.

Got that? A party that now explicitly stands for subverting democracy is as likely to be seen as being on the “right track” as a party that is (quaintly!) working to protect the franchise. Voters are somehow looking at the pro-democracy party and the anti-democracy party and concluding, “Meh, they seem about equal.”

Even worse, while voters’ views of the GOP’S direction have improved in the past 12 months, their views of Democrats’ direction have deteriorat­ed. A year ago, the share of voters who endorsed the “track” Democrats were on was seven points higher, at 41%.

Likewise, the GOP has not been punished where it might really matter: its campaign war chest.

Immediatel­y after the insurrecti­on, dozens of high-profile corporatio­ns and lobbyists condemned the violence; declared their unwavering support for a peaceful transition of power; and announced that they were halting contributi­ons to politician­s who voted against election certificat­ion or were pausing political donations altogether.

But these pledges to honor their democratic values with their wallets proved short-lived. Many resumed their regular donation activity within months, including with big gifts to 2020 election objectors.

How did this happen? How did the public forget the trauma that was the attack on our sacred seat of government?

In the initial hours and days after the attempted coup, a relatively broad group of Republican­s rebuked Trump for his role in spreading the “big lie,” encouragin­g his followers to march upon the Capitol, and then ignoring pleas to intercede as he watched the resulting violence and destructio­n on TV. Even House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., acknowledg­ed early on that Trump “bears responsibi­lity” for the “attack on Congress by mob rioters,” and floated the idea of a censure resolution.

But in a sequence that will be familiar to those who remember the “Access Hollywood” tape story, Trump sloughed off the criticism. The base stood by him. And in no time, high-level Republican officials such as Mccarthy decided it was politicall­y safer to get back on side.

Trump’s allies began to argue that it was too soon to figure out who was truly accountabl­e for the misinforma­tion and incitement to violence, that more evidence needed to be gathered; now, a year later, after evidence has been gathered, they suggest too much time has passed to continue dwelling on these divisive events. It’s all ancient history!

The public, alas, seems to largely agree. Support for the House select committee investigat­ing Jan. 6 has been sliding, according to Morning Consult. As my colleague Margaret Sullivan has written persuasive­ly, many of us in the media have also struggled with how to center the story of a democracy still under siege, especially amid the other, less abstract crises befalling our nation.

Meanwhile, Republican officehold­ers have gotten more sophistica­ted about how to subvert the will of the voters.

Next time, no Viking-horned, pelted buffoons will be necessary; nor any attacks on brave Capitol Police officers; nor any crass congressio­nal fist pumps to the rioters; nor, possibly, any difficult votes from federal lawmakers. Thanks to a raft of anti-democratic bills moving through Gop-controlled state legislatur­es, the franchise can be restricted, and both local election officials and ballots tossed, long before official vote tallies make their way to Washington.

These are the consequenc­es of imposing no consequenc­es.

Catherine Rampell’s email address is crampell@washpost.com. Follow her on Twitter: @crampell.

Support for the House select committee investigat­ing Jan. 6 has been sliding, according to Morning Consult. As my colleague Margaret Sullivan has written persuasive­ly, many of us in the media have also struggled with how to center the story of a democracy still under siege, especially amid the other, less abstract crises befalling our nation.

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MIKE LUCKOVICH

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