23 July,2022 12:15 PM IST | Washington | Agencies
This exhibit from a video released by the House Select Committee, shows rioters inside the Capitol Rotunda on Jan. 6, 2021 displayed at a hearing on Thursday. Pic/AP
After losing the 2020 election, Donald Trump ignored close allies who told him that his claims of widespread election fraud were untrue, and when the followers who believed his false accusations stormed the U.S. Capitol, he sat back and watched.
That was the narrative the U.S. House of Representatives' select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack laid out in eight hearings over six weeks, which wrapped up with a study of the former president's actions during the 187-minute assault on Congress by thousands of his supporters.
"President Trump sat at his dining table and watched the attack on television while his senior-most staff, closest advisors and family members begged him to do what is expected of any American president," U.S. Representative Elaine Luria said. "President Trump refused to act because of his selfish desire to stay in power."
Some 18 months after the deadly assault, the hearings replayed video of rioters smashing their way into the Capitol, screaming "Hang Mike Pence" as they hunted the vice president who Trump had called on to overturn his election defeat.
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They featured hours of testimony, some live and some recorded, from close Trump allies including former Attorney General Bill Barr, who dismissed Trump's fraud claims as "bullshit," and former White House staff including one who recalled an enraged president hurling plates, leaving ketchup running down a wall. The hearings were intended to lay out a case that the Republican Trump violated law as he tried, for the first time in U.S. history, to stop the peaceful transfer of power from one president to the next.
It is not clear if Justice Department will bring charges against Trump, but the hearings appear to have somewhat hurt his standing with Republican voters. Attorney General Merrick Garland this week declined to say whether the Justice Department would charge Trump. But he did not rule it out. "No person is above the law in this country. I can't say it any more clearly than that," Garland told reporters on Wednesday.
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