The Guardian (USA)

Pelosi announces plans for 9/11-style commission to examine Capitol riot

- Joanna Walters in New York and agency

Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker, said on Monday that the US Congress will move to establish an outside, independen­t commission to review the “facts and causes” related to the deadly 6 January insurrecti­on at the US Capitol by supporters of Donald Trump in the waning days of his presidency.

Pelosi said in a letter to members of Congress that the commission would be modeled on a similar one convened after the 11 September 2001, terrorist attack on Washington and New York.

Establishi­ng such a body, were it to resemble the commission that reviewed the 9/11 crisis, is expected to require legislatio­n.

Democratic and Republican lawmakers had called for a bipartisan 9/11style commission to investigat­e why government officials and law enforcemen­t failed to stop the attack on the Capitol, while both chambers of Congress were engaged in the process of certifying Joe Biden’s election victory.

The calls followed Trump’s acquittal in his second impeachmen­t trial, in which he was accused of inciting the insurrecti­on after months of stoking his supporters with exhortatio­ns to try to overturn the election result and an inflammato­ry rally on the day itself, outside the White House, when he urged angry supporters to march on the Capitol.

Pelosi said on Monday that the panel will also look at the “facts and causes” behind the catastroph­e, in which five people died on 6 January, including a police officer, many were injured, and two police officers died by suicide in the days that followed.

There were renewed calls from both parties on Sunday for such a commission.

“We need a 9/11 commission to find out what happened and make sure it never happens again, and I want to make sure that the Capitol footprint can be better defended next time,” said Lindsey Graham, a Republican senator of South Carolina and close Trump ally who voted to acquit the former president on Saturday. “His behavior after the election was over the top,” Graham said of the former president on Fox News Sunday.

Democrat Chris Coons of Delaware agreed. Speaking on ABC’s This Week, he said that a bipartisan commission would “make sure we secure the Capitol going forward and that we lay bare the record of just how responsibl­e and how abjectly violating of his constituti­onal oath Trump really was”.

Pelosi’s statement on Monday referred to a review that has been under way, led by the retired US army general Russel Honoré.

Pelosi said: “For the past few weeks, General Honoré has been assessing our security needs by reviewing what happened on January 6 and how we must ensure that it does not happen again … It is clear from his findings and from the impeachmen­t trial that we must get to the truth of how this happened.”

She continued: “Our next step will be to establish an outside, independen­t 9/11-type commission to “investigat­e and report on the facts and causes relating to the January 6, 2021, domestic terrorist attack upon the United States Capitol Complex … and relating to the interferen­ce with the peaceful transfer of power, including facts and causes relating to the preparedne­ss and response of the United States Capitol Police and other Federal, State, and local law enforcemen­t in the National Capitol Region.”

More than a month after the attack, the Capitol complex remains guarded by more than 5,000 national guard troops and ringed with eight-foot fences rimmed with razor wire. The troops are expected to remain through mid-March.

Last month, the US Capitol police head urged lawmakers to add permanent fencing and back-up security, noting a 2006 security assessment recommende­d installati­on of a permanent perimeter fence around the Capitol.

But many members of Congress and the Washington DC mayor, Muriel Bowser, have urged congressio­nal leaders not to adopt permanent fencing or

military security.

More than 200 people have been charged with federal crimes in the bloody assault on Congress and a huge investigat­ion is ongoing.

Four House Republican­s wrote to Pelosi on Monday complainin­g that their party had not been consulted about Honoré’s review and also demanded answers about her knowledge and instructio­ns ahead of the insurrecti­on, including whether she was involved in delaying the deployment of the national guard, a charge Pelosi dismissed, according to several reports.

 ?? Photograph: Alex Edelman/AFP/Getty Images ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, with House impeachmen­t managers, speaks to the press after the Senate voted to acquit Donald Trump on 13 February.
Photograph: Alex Edelman/AFP/Getty Images Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, with House impeachmen­t managers, speaks to the press after the Senate voted to acquit Donald Trump on 13 February.

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