Headlines

An infamous day. A search for answers. Will America tune in?

Share with:


Loading

An infamous day. A search for answers. Will America tune in?

By CALVIN WOODWARD2 hours ago

FILE - Violent insurrections loyal to President Donald Trump break through a police barrier at the Capitol in Washington. Over months, the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection has issued more than 100 subpoenas, done more than 1,000 interviews and probed more than 100,000 documents to get to the bottom of the attack that day in 2021 by supporters of former President Donald Trump. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

1 of 5FILE – Violent insurrections loyal to President Donald Trump break through a police barrier at the Capitol in Washington. Over months, the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection has issued more than 100 subpoenas, done more than 1,000 interviews and probed more than 100,000 documents to get to the bottom of the attack that day in 2021 by supporters of former President Donald Trump. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans are processing the nightmare of the slaughter of children in Texas, the racist murders in Buffalo, New York, and the other numbingly repeated scenes of carnage in the United States.

They’re contending with what feels like highway robbery at the gas pump, they’re nagged by a virus that the world can’t shake, and they’re split into two hostile camps over politics and culture — the twin pillars of the nation’s foundation.

They’ve already been through two set-piece dramas of presidential impeachment — indeed, through the wringer on all things Donald Trump.

Now, beginning in prime time on Thursday, the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol is setting out to establish the historical record of an event damaging not only to a community or individual families but to the collective idea of democracy itself.

After more than 100 subpoenas, 1,000 interviews and 100,000 documents, the committee has a story to tell in hearings that open this week. A story for the ages, it’s been said.

ADVERTISEMENT

The open question: How much will the country care?

The committee’s examination of the actions of Trump and all the president’s men and women, more aggressive than any inquiry before it, has produced a multitude of plot lines that together will tell the tale of a violent uprising fueled by the venom and lies of a defeated president.

CAPITOL SIEGE

An infamous day. A search for answers. Will America tune in?Ex-Trump aide Navarro indicted; Meadows won’t be chargedEx-Trump aide Navarro indicted; Meadows won’t be chargedJan. 6 committee sets prime-time hearing date for findings

Many Republicans, even those who condemned Trump and the violence in the moment, have adopted a “nothing more to see here” posture since, even rejecting calls for an independent Sept. 11-style commission to investigate.

An entire disinformation ecosystem sprung up with utterly false claims about the nature and character of the attack. Rather than condemn the it, Trump continues to insist his defeat by 7 million votes should be overturned, in effect validating the rioters’ cause.

Dozens of the insurrectionists have been brought to justice, many of them being convicted or pleading guilty to serious crimes. But the committee’s goal is larger: Who in a position of power should also be held to account?

There are endless ribbons of inquiry.

Did Vice President Mike Pence refuse to leave the besieged Capitol because he suspected the Secret Service, at the behest of Trump, was trying to take him away to stop him from certifying Democrat Joe Biden’s victory? Did Trump flush incriminating papers down the White House toilet?

How to explain the gap of more than seven hours in White House telephone logs of Trump’s calls during the insurrection? Will it stand in history alongside the infamous 18 1/2-minute hole in President Richard Nixon’s secret White House recording system in 1972?

The Watergate affair, which exposed Nixon’s cover-up of politically motivated criminal acts and destroyed his presidency, centered on a question posed by a Republican senator, Howard Baker, in a Tennessee drawl: “What did the president know, and when did he know it?”

For the Jan. 6 committee, the key question about Trump’s involvement in the insurrection is: What did the president do, and when did he do it?

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b01b87b61736154818c05140bdc39c73.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html

One aim is to establish whether Trump’s acts are criminal, as one judge has mused they may be, and whether that would prompt a politically fraught Justice Department prosecution of an ex-president.

More broadly, the effort addresses who might be punished in the large circle of Trump enablers. Some of them are members of Congress who helped him plot how to try to overturn an honest election only to huddle in fear with everyone else in a Capitol hideout when the rioters — in service of that plot — swarmed the marbled corridors of power Jan. 6, 2021.

The prime-time setting for the committee hearing is a rarity and something of a throwback to an era when people gathered en masse at their televisions in the evening before video streaming atomized viewership.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat on the committee, set expectations that may be hard to live up to as the committee tries to renew the interest of this short-attention-span country in machinations that are nearly 18 months in the rearview mirror.

The hazards in that mirror are closer than they appear, as committee members see it.

“The hearings will tell a story that will really blow the roof off the House,” Raskin said in April. “Because it is a story of the most heinous and dastardly political offense ever organized by a president and his followers and his entourage in the history of the United States.”

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b01b87b61736154818c05140bdc39c73.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html

That offense? In short, he told a Washington forum, “an inside coup” coupled with a violent attack by “neo-fascists.”

Trump is not expected at any of the hearings, but his words and actions will hang heavy over the proceedings as lawmakers look to place him at the center of the chaos. It seems highly plausible that he will find a way to rail against them that does not involve being under oath.

The committee almost certainly will look to draw a tight connection between Trump’s vociferous rejections of the election results and his Jan. 6 rally outside the White House sending the angry crowd off to Capitol Hill.

Free from the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, committee members are likely to try to show that the riot that ravaged the Capitol was not a spontaneous gathering but part of a broader conspiracy and a natural outgrowth of weeks of denunciations of democratic processes.

Biden framed Jan. 6 and its aftermath in existential terms about the threat posed to democracy. It’s a “battle for the soul of America,” he said. But a president can only have one No. 1 priority at a time, and this isn’t his. Time and again, he’s said it’s inflation.

ADVERTISEMENT

Whatever revelations the hearings may produce, much is already known because the attack played out on screens large and small in real time, and Trump exhorted supporters to “fight like hell” in shouts for the world to hear.

“In quieter times, the hearings would have a stronger hold on public attention,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania and an authority on political communications. “But, as is, they will be competing for attention with topics with greater immediate relevance in our lives.”

Hungry babies lacking formula. Soaring prices for gas and groceries. Rising COVID-19 hospitalization among the vaccinated. The scenes of destruction in Ukraine and the threat that the Russian invasion will escalate to include use of nuclear weapons. And there’s monkeypox.

“To say nothing of summer vacation,” Jamieson added.

“If the hearings are to do anything other than reinforce our existing political biases,” she said, “they will have to reveal previously covered-up goings-on that threatened something that Democrats, independents and most Republicans can agree should be sacrosanct.”

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b01b87b61736154818c05140bdc39c73.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html

Some of the inquiry’s juicy bits are out already. Text messages and emails, thought to be private when sent, have become public, including from chief of staff Mark Meadows.

But the committee has been sitting on much more information and will have tens of thousands of exhibits and hundreds of witnesses, said Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, the committee chairman.

Seven Democrats and two Republicans — both shunned by their party — make up the committee. Among them the stakes are surely highest for Rep. Liz Cheney, the deeply conservative but fiercely independent Wyoming lawmaker who is practically alone in the GOP in assailing Trump while also seeking reelection to Congress.

Daughter of a vice president and once an embodiment of the Republican establishment, she is now a renegade in a new order dominated by Trump, who wants her unseated in her primary in August.

That new order became ever clearer in February, when the Republican Party censured Cheney and the committee’s other Republican, Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger, who’s not seeking reelection, for taking part in the inquiry. The party adopted a resolution saying the witnesses summoned by the committee for their actions on and around Jan. 6 had only been engaging in “legitimate political discourse.”

Matthew Delmont, a Dartmouth College history professor specializing in Black history, said Jan. 6 cast such an ominous shadow that he expects people in the United States, for all of their other pressing preoccupations, to be drawn to the inquiry.

“I think people will watch the Jan. 6 hearings because they want to understand how our democracy reached this precipice,” he said. “I don’t know how many people will be willing to hear the evidence that will be presented, but I think it is important for the findings to be shared openly so people today and in the future can appreciate what happened.”

Jan. 6 shares certain distinctions with other past agonies. As with 9/11, you can shorthand the date, Jan. 6, and people know. Like Watergate, it speaks to corrupt acts in the highest office. As with the Challenger space shuttle explosion and 9/11 and more, the scene brought so much visceral shock that many people remember where they were and what they were doing when they saw it.

As far as the far right is concerned, the historical analogy is the Boston Tea Party, with liberals, Democrats and the Washington establishment as the redcoats.

Trump-friendly Republicans sanitized what happened that day, once the shock that nearly all felt on Jan. 6 subsided. In measurements of public opinion, Republican voters in the main said they believe the 2020 election was rigged, when by absolutely all measures — the courts, nonpartisan and even Republican state officials, and the Trump administration’s own election monitors, including his attorney general — the election was purely fair.

A year later, the patently violent uprising was remembered as very or extremely violent by fewer than 4 in 10 Republicans polled, compared with almost 9 in 10 Democrats.

Even so, there were signs in the latest Republican primaries for the 2022 midterms that Trump’s obsession about getting fired by the voters all those months ago is wearing thin even with them.

Trump won the 2016 election with a minority of voters, lost the House to the Democrats in 2018 and lost in 2020 by a decisive margin — not a glowing electoral record.

Still he holds sway over his party, thanks to supporters whose loyalty seems immovable. Unswayed by facts throughout the fight to discredit and upend Biden’s election, they won’t be easily dislodged by a congressional committee’s revelations.

Through Trump’s presidency, audacious falsehoods and elaborate exaggerations were the order of the day. But Trump, at times, had a knack for speaking a larger truth that penetrated his fog of hyperbole and misinformation.

So it was with his comment in Iowa in January 2016, en route to the Republican nomination. The comment foretells that even if the Jan. 6 committee manages to “blow the roof off the House,” Trump may remain golden with millions who love him.

“I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any voters, OK?” Trump said then. “It’s, like, incredible.”

___

Associated Press writer Eric Tucker contributed to this report.

___

This story has been corrected to show Trump lost the House, not the House and the Senate, in 2018.

ADVERTISEMENT

Promoted

You May Like

What’s With the Surge in Mortgage Rates?Promoted: NerdWallet

Facilities: Save Money with Clipboard Health – Clipboard HealthPromoted: Clipboard HealthRead More

Research Healthy & Natural Dog Treats OnlinePromoted: Yahoo! Search

CI Private WealthPromoted: CI Private WealthLearn More

by Taboola

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b01b87b61736154818c05140bdc39c73.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html

PAID FOR BY COMPARISONS.ORG

Phoenix,Arizona Launches New Policy For Cars Used Less Than 49 Miles/Day

Drivers With No Tickets In 3 Years Should Do This On June

Phoenix,Arizona Launches New Policy For Cars Used Less Than 49 Miles/Day

https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.517.2_en.html#goog_606710507
https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.517.2_en.html#goog_1460917589
https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.517.2_en.html#goog_2105556506
https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.517.2_en.html#goog_2105556508

Trump’s Ukraine impeachment shadows war, risks GOP responseWASHINGTON (AP) — When President Donald Trump was impeachedyesterday

Ad Content

Separate Business & Personal With a Small Business CardPromoted: NerdWallet

A spray paint that sticks to nearly anything.Promoted: Krylon® Fusion All-In-One®

2022’s Standout Business Credit Cards. See Deals That Outshine the RestPromoted: NerdWallet

All the glitter, without the glue.Promoted: Krylon® Spray Paint

UN: Taliban faces threat from Islamic State, new resistanceUNITED NATIONS (AP) — Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers are maintaining close ties with al-QaidaJune 3, 2022

High-profile candidates try to break Dem, GOP controlSALEM, Ore. (AP) — A former lawmaker in Oregon who as a young woman flew a helicopter around an erupting Mount St. Helens is aiming to shake up state politics by running as an unaffiliated candidate for governor.June 4, 2022

Ad Content

House Affordability CalculatorPromoted: NerdWallet

Search For Storage And Moving Pods CostPromoted: Yahoo! SearchClick Here

How to Identify and Fill Staffing Gaps at Your Facility – Clipboard HealthPromoted: Clipboard HealthRead More

Trump backing of Michels threatens to upend Wisconsin raceDonald Trump’s endorsement of construction company co-owner Tim Michels in Wisconsin’s hotly contested governor’s race threatens to further divide Republicans and upend the race less than two months before the primary.June 3, 2022

Arizona Republican Party urges judge to end mail-in votingPHOENIX (AP) — A lawyer for the Arizona Republican Party and its firebrand leader, Kelli Ward, urged a judge Friday to invalidate Arizona’s overwhelmingly popular system of mail-in voting, a process used by about 90% of voters.June 3, 2022

Ad Content

Eggs With More of The Good Stuff. See How Eggland’s Best Does Things Differently.Promoted: Eggland’s Best

See How Much Does it Cost to Replace a RoofPromoted: The Roofing Estimate

Roof Replacement Estimator – Just Enter Your Zip CodePromoted: The Roofing Estimate

The Best Men’s Shoes for Walking and Standing All DayPromoted: Wmshoe.com

GOP Rep. Jacobs to retire after backing assault weapons banNEW YORK (AP) — Republican Rep. Chris Jacobs announced Friday that he will not run for another term in Congress amid backlash over his support for new gun control measures. Jacobs, who represents parts of western New York, including suburban Buffalo, told reporters he has decided to retire instead oJune 3, 2022

Online pro-gun extremism: ‘Cool for active shooter stuff’The young man in the jeans and sunglasses proudly shows off his gun in the YouTube video, then instructs his 1 million subscribers how to fit extra ammo on his belt, and offers a chilling observation.June 4, 2022

Ad Content

Wear This Men’s Shoe That You Can Walk or Stand For Hours Without DiscomfortPromoted: Hsweetgirl.comShop Now

US recession risks — why and why not?Promoted: abrdn

The Best Walking Shoes for Men to Wear All Day LongPromoted: TodaysDeals-V.comShop Now

Election 2022: Primaries shift focus to control of US HouseDES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A midterm primary seasontoday

Durant won’t endorse in Alabama’s Senate runoffMONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Mike Durant, the “Black Hawk Down” pilot who finished third in Alabama’s Republican Senate primary, said he will not make an endorsement in the upcoming runoff.June 4, 2022

AP NEWS

  1. Top Stories
  2. Video
  3. Contact Us
  4. Accessibility Statement
  5. Cookie Settings

DOWNLOAD AP NEWS

Connect with the definitive source for global and local news

MORE FROM AP

  1. ap.org
  2. AP Insights
  3. AP Definitive Source Blog
  4. AP Images Spotlight
  5. AP Explore
  6. AP Books

FOLLOW AP

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

  1. About
  2. Contact
  3. Customer Support
  4. Careers
  5. Terms & Conditions
  6. Privacy

All contents © copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.https://secure-assets.rubiconproject.com/utils/xapi/multi-sync.html?p=19564_2&endpoint=us-east

javascript:void(0)

Share with:


Verified by MonsterInsights