Heard On The Hill · 117th Congress
Counting votes with Rep. Deborah K. Ross
But the work of the Jan. 6 committee and the will of the voters defying expectations in the midterms — it shows the American people can be resilient and smart.
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But the work of the Jan. 6 committee and the will of the voters defying expectations in the midterms — it shows the American people can be resilient and smart.
The event was heralded as the first time a congressional committee waxed videographical, although that’s not true in the strictest sense — this fall, the select committee investigating the Jan. 6,
that “there absolutely needs to be new norms” for the safety of members and staff, rather than a return to the same exact procedures in place before the pandemic and last year’s mob violence on Jan. 6.
Krepp said it was difficult dealing with the coronavirus and each state’s separate regulations, but when a mob attacked the Capitol last year on Jan. 6, it made things worse in D.C., where he also lives
Most will run around $6-$7 per coin, not counting design fees, and really complex or large coins can easily cost double that.
“When I was trapped in the gallery on Jan. 6, that was the first time I met some of those members I was with,” said Jacobs, a Democrat from California.
The first class started at 6 a.m., and the last ended at 10 a.m. Then they’d walk over to the Capitol building to run messages for lawmakers. The day ended when Congress adjourned.
BY ALEX GANGITANO AND REMA RAHMANUpdated 6:45 p.m. | A painting by a constituent of Missouri Democratic Rep.