Congress · 117th Congress
‘We’ll have catastrophe’: Jan. 6 committee warns Trump-led threat to elections is ongoing
Bennie Thompson, chair of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and the weeks leading up to it.
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Bennie Thompson, chair of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and the weeks leading up to it.
The word was uttered 41 times Monday during the Jan. 6 select committee’s second much-anticipated June hearing and over and over by its members during a weeklong cable TV blitz.
In the days before Jan. 6, 2021, President Donald Trump pressured Vice President Mike Pence to reject Joe Biden electors or delay certification and send them back to states.
The Jan. 6 panel first asked Loudermilk in May to sit for an interview about that Jan. 5 tour.
The House Jan. 6 select committee postponed its Wednesday hearing, which was scheduled to examine the way in which Donald Trump used the waning days of his presidency to install Jeffrey Clark as acting
Barry Loudermilk’s constituents who visited the complex the day before the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack were not suspicious.
The Jan. 6 select committee made that argument on Monday and walked the public through a full roster of Trump employees and administration officials who flatly told him he lost the election.
Republicans have resisted congressional attempts to examine the facts and circumstances surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021, riot.
Summer is nearly here, but Capitol Hill this week was focused on the winter of our discontent — Jan. 6, specifically — as the House select committee investigating it prepared for its first hearing on
‘Prevented the politicization’ The vast majority of House Republicans are keen on putting Jan. 6 in the past.
And as his team pleaded with him to call off the mob at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, Trump responded the rioters “were doing what they should be doing,” which included knocking Capitol Police officer Caroline
Irving, one of the top officials tasked with Capitol security on Jan. 6, provided testimony to the panel.
Blanton is one of three voting members on the Capitol Police Board, an entity that makes decisions about security on the Capitol complex, and the only one who withstood the fallout of the Jan. 6
In addition to high fuel costs, the transportation company based in McCarthy’s district is having a difficult time hiring class A drivers, which has boosted labor prices 6 to 10 percent, Mashburn
Then came the Jan. 6, 2021, ransacking of the Capitol — complete with threats to Vice President Mike Pence, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other lawmakers — by a pro-Trump mob revved up by their political
Michael Bolton — the Capitol Police inspector general who provided a critical assessment of department deficiencies related to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and recommended fixes for those shortcomings
and get blocks away for their safety, raises questions about communication shortfalls among partner agencies in the region as the issue of Capitol security is still being analyzed following the Jan. 6,
When Brown spoke to the workers, who endured a punishing two years that included a pandemic and violent insurrection at their workplace on Jan. 6, he told the crowd how much he valued them.
Upton was among the Republican House members who voted in favor of impeaching President Donald Trump after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the Capitol.
“We’ve seen a 100 percent increase in death threats since Jan. 6,” said Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota. Threats against Mary Gay Scanlon of Pennsylvania surged in 2021.