USA TODAY US Edition

Pelosi ‘war’ over Jan. 6 panel is one Republican­s started

You have to be doing Olympic-level contortion­ism if including Reps. Adam Kinzinger and Liz Cheney doesn’t meet your idea of committee bipartisan­ship

- Kurt Bardella Board of Contributo­rs USA TODAY

Two things happened on Jan. 6. First, there was that domestic terrorist attack on the U.S. Capitol and second, 147 Republican­s returned to the U.S. Capitol after said domestic terrorist attack and gave the legislativ­e equivalent of a stamp of approval to said domestic terrorists by voting to overturn the results of a free and fair presidenti­al election.

On this day, it became the official position of many (most?) in the Republican Party to reject democracy. It is crucial that we never forget this sequence of events ever again.

So when I read headlines like “Pelosi goes to war with GOP over Jan. 6,” or “Jan. 6 select committee to open investigat­ion amid political chaos and controvers­y,” or “McCarthy-Pelosi feud boils over,” it drives me absolutely crazy.

As a former Republican, I can tell you: Those headlines are playing right into the Republican Party’s hands.

Not a partisan squabble

By rejecting the addition of domestic terrorist sympathize­rs like Republican Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio and Jim Banks of Indiana to the select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has taken a principled stand in defense of democracy. You don’t get to investigat­e a crime you helped commit.

In fact, their exclusion ensures that the committee’s proceeding­s will in fact be free from “chaos” because Jordan and Banks won’t be interrupti­ng whoever is speaking every five seconds or injecting questions based on radical conspiracy theories in an effort to detract from the panel’s core mission.

The news media need to do better here. This isn’t your typical inside-baseball Democrat vs. Republican leadership squabble. Don’t treat something as serious as this with such frivolity. Too much is at stake.

If bipartisan­ship was the true goal of Republican­s in Congress, they would have supported the effort to initiate a Sept. 11-type bipartisan commission. They didn’t.

Since Jan. 6, some Republican­s in Congress have rewritten history. Georgia Rep. Andrew Clyde compared the events of that day to a “normal tourist visit.” Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar called participan­ts in the attack “peaceful patriots.” Former President Donald Trump, the leader of the GOP, in an audio interview for a new book by Carol Leonnig and Phillip Rucker, “I Alone Can Fix It,” called them “loving.”

Fraud if GOP loses

The Republican­s’ endgame is to create a world in which they and they alone win elections. Any election that doesn’t result in a GOP win is labeled fraudulent and should be overturned.

On what planet is it rational to expect that the speaker of the House of Representa­tives would let anyone who subscribes to this brand of authoritar­ianism participat­e in an investigat­ion into the autocrats behind a domestic terrorist event?

Only in the never-never land that is Beltway-media world would this sequence of events be interprete­d as “Pelosi goes to war with GOP.”

The speaker has demonstrat­ed her commitment to facts and truth by appointing Republican Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger to the panel. Kinzinger was a darling of the Tea Party movement that preceded Trumpism, and Cheney has a higher conservati­ve rating with multiple conservati­ve groups than Rep. Elise Stefanik, whose colleagues chose her to replace the ousted Cheney in the House GOP leadership hierarchy back in May. You really have to be doing some Olympiclev­el contortion­ism if having a Kinzinger and a Cheney on a panel doesn’t meet your qualificat­ion for bipartisan.

Going forward from Tuesday, when it first met, the Jan. 6 select committee should be reported on as bipartisan. Its hearings, findings and proceeding­s should be labeled bipartisan. There should be no mention of House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy or Jim Jordan or Jim Banks in any story about this committee’s work going forward.

The panel that has been constructe­d is bipartisan and substantiv­e. Efforts to portray this select committee as anything but that are playing right into the hands of domestic terrorists and their allies.

No ‘both sides’ here

The architects of “The Big Lie” that culminated with the attack on Jan. 6 are dependent on the media clinging to some fantasy that the Republican Party is a good-faith actor in the demise of our democracy. They are counting on the principle of objectivit­y forcing journalist­s to present events as “both sides” on equal footing and give their spokespeop­le equal time and space to continue advancing their narratives – even though those narratives are propaganda designed to radicalize a segment of the American public against fundamenta­l democratic principles. Sad to say, so far, it’s worked. The truth is we live in a time where there are clear heroes and clearly people who’ve made a different choice. It does no one any good to try to tiptoe around that. Kevin McCarthy, Jim Jordan and Jim Banks are among the latter. Nancy Pelosi, Adam Kinzinger, Liz Cheney and the other patriots working to get to the truth of one of our nation’s darkest days are the heroes.

It’s that simple.

The war that we are in, the war to protect our democracy, wasn’t started by the Democrats or Nancy Pelosi. It wasn’t a war they were looking to fight. But it sure as hell is a war that they don’t intend on losing.

Kurt Bardella, a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs and an adviser to the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, is a former spokespers­on and senior adviser for Republican­s on the House Oversight Committee.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP ?? From left, Capitol Police officer Aquilino Gonell, D.C. officer Michael Fanone, Capitol officer Harry Dunn and D.C. officer Daniel Hodges after testifying to Congress on Tuesday.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP From left, Capitol Police officer Aquilino Gonell, D.C. officer Michael Fanone, Capitol officer Harry Dunn and D.C. officer Daniel Hodges after testifying to Congress on Tuesday.
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