The Guardian (USA)

January 6 hearing: Trump was at heart of plot that led to ‘attempted coup’

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

The House select committee investigat­ing the deadly January 6 assault on the US Capitol in 2021 said Donald Trump was at the center of a sprawling conspiracy to overturn the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election that culminated in an “attempted coup”.

With a shocking new accounting of the worst attack on the halls of Congress in more than two centuries, the committee outlined in gripping detail over the course of two hours on Thursday night the grave threat posed to American democracy then and now by the former president’s actions.

In new evidence, Congresswo­man Liz Cheney, a Republican of Wyoming and the committee’s vice-chair, said of Trump: “Aware of the rioters’ chants to ‘hang Mike Pence’ [his vice-president], the president responded with this sentiment: ‘Maybe our supporters have the right idea.’ Mike Pence ‘deserves’ it.”

“The American people deserve answers,” said Congressma­n Bennie Thompson, a Mississipp­i Democrat and chair of the committee. “So tonight, and over the next few weeks, we’re going to remind you of the reality of what happened that day.

Thompson and Cheney laid out what they described as the “unconstitu­tional” misconduct of a former president who continues to peddle the lie that the election he lost to the Democrats’ Joe Biden was stolen from him – a lie, they argue, that he knows to be false.

“All Americans should keep in mind this fact,” Cheney said during the primetime proceeding­s, “on the morning of January 6, President Donald Trump’s intention was to remain president of the United States despite the lawful outcome of the 2020 election and in violation of his constituti­onal obligation to relinquish power.”

Their presentati­on featured neverbefor­e-seen video from the attack by extremist supporters of Trump who stormed the US Capitol to try to stop Congress from certifying Biden’s win.

In a cinematic display meant to grip a weary public,the panel weaved footage of the violence together with live testimony and videotaped deposition­s from some of Trump’s closest allies and family members.

These included the former attorney general William Barr, Donald Trump’s daughter and White House adviser

Ivanka Trump, his son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner, and a longtime aide and spokespers­on, Jason Miller. The effect was piercing.

The first of six public hearings offered revelation­s on what Thompson described as a “sprawling, multi-step conspiracy aimed at overturnin­g the presidenti­al election”.

Members of the audience gasped when Cheney said Trump, after being informed the mob was calling for Pence to be hanged, told aides that perhaps his vice-president “deserved” it. Trump was furious that Pence, presiding over a joint session of Congress in what is typically a ceremonial role, refused to reject the certificat­ion of Biden’s victory, as Trump publicly and privately pressured him to do.

The committee showed a clip of Barr saying he “repeatedly” told Trump “in no uncertain terms” that he had lost the election and the claims of it being “stolen” because of widespread voting fraud were “bullshit”.

In another interview, Ivanka Trump said she “accepted” Barr’s determinat­ion that the presidenti­al election had been fair.

On Friday morning, Trump posted on his own Truth Social platform, having been banned from Twitter, calling Barr “weak and frightened” and his own daughter “checked out”.

Cheney also announced that multiple House Republican­s sought pardons from Trump for their involvemen­t in the insurrecti­on, including Congressma­n Scott Perry of Pennsylvan­ia, who declined a request to testify before the committee. Perry’s office denied the allegation.

The evening presentati­on also included witness testimony from Nick Quested, a British documentar­y filmmaker who was embedded with the far-right Proud Boys group that led the storming of the Capitol. Footage he filmed helped chronicle the Proud Boys’ involvemen­t in planning the assault.

On Friday morning, Quested told ABC’s Good Morning America that at the point the far right extremists he was filming breached the first barriers on the outskirts of the Capitol “it all changed” as men protesting far left “antifa” turned into rioters challengin­g the outnumbere­d police.

“It crossed the rubicon at that point,” he said and the mob was pouring over the Capitol steps “like water”.

The panel also heard fromCaroli­ne Edwards, a Capitol police officer who described in harrowing detail how she was assaulted by the mob, some armed with bats, clubs and bear spray. Edwards said she was knocked unconsciou­s on the steps and after she came to, she ran to help overwhelme­d officers trying to stop insurrecti­onists breaking into the Senate.

The scene was like a “war zone” she said, and she was slipping on her fellow officers’ blood. “It was carnage. It was chaos,” she said.

Drawing on the findings of their nearly year-long investigat­ion, which includes more than 100 subpoenas, 1,000 interviews and 100,000 docu

ments, the select committee will attempt to establish a comprehens­ive sequence of events that built to the cold January day when Trump encouraged his supporters to “fight like hell”.

The attack, which played out in realtime on national television, left more than 100 police officers injured, as they clashed with a pro-Trump mob. Nine people lost their lives in connection with the riot, including a woman who was fatally shot by a Capitol police officer as she attempted to breach the House chamber.

Convincing a deeply polarized American public that the Capitol riot was not a spontaneou­s act of violence but the culminatio­n of a months-long plot by Trump and his allies to undermine the results of a free and fair election is no easy task for the committee.

Thompson argued that American democracy “remains in danger” as many Republican­s at local and national level continue to boost the myth that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump and use it in their own election campaigns.

“The conspiracy to thwart the will of the people is not over,” Thompson said.

“January 6 and the lies that led to insurrecti­on have put two and a half centuries of constituti­onal democracy at risk,” he added. “The world is watching what we do here.”

The select committee is composed of seven Democrats and two Republican­s.

Speaking from the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles before the hearing on Wednesday, Biden said the assault on the Capitol was a “clear and flagrant violation of the constituti­on”. “A lot of Americans are going to see for the first time some of the details,” he said.

Hundreds have been charged in connection with the events of January 6, including some with seditious conspiracy.

The hearings will resume next week.

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/ Getty Images ?? Donald Trump speaks to supporters from the Ellipse near the White House on 6 January 2021.
Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/ Getty Images Donald Trump speaks to supporters from the Ellipse near the White House on 6 January 2021.

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