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Don’t Let Senate Republicans Keep Us From Learning the
Truth About the Attack on the Capitol
By Ben Jealous
Republicans in the
U.S. Senate are a threat to our democracy.
Here’s the latest
proof: Republicans are using the Senate’s filibuster rules to stop Congress
from creating a commission to investigate the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the
U.S. Capitol. The filibuster has a long and dishonorable history. It was
used over and over to block passage of civil rights laws. Now it is being
used to undermine democracy in another way.
On one level, we all
know what happened on Jan. 6. A violent mob of Donald Trump supporters
tried to stop Congress from affirming the victory of President Joe Biden
and Vice President Kamala Harris. They wanted to overturn the results of
the election and keep Trump in power.
That mob had blood
on their minds. And they ended up with blood on their hands. Fortunately,
they didn’t get a chance to hang Mike Pence or kill Nancy Pelosi or other
members of Congress they were targeting. But five people died that day. And
more than a hundred Capitol Police officers were wounded. One lost an eye, one
lost fingers, some suffered brain injuries. Many are traumatized by a
battle they didn’t expect they would have to fight.
We also know what
fueled the rage of that mob: Trump’s big lie. The lie that Trump won the
election and had it stolen from him and his supporters by Black voters
and corrupt election officials. Everyone who spread that
lie, helped to light the fuse and fan the flames that exploded on Jan. 6.
Those who committed
violence must be charged, tried, convicted, and sent to prison. And the
whole enterprise—those who incited violence and those who planned it—must
be thoroughly investigated. People must be held accountable. The best way
to do that was with a bipartisan committed to finding
the truth.
Thanks to online
activists and journalists, we are learning more about what happened that
day. Regular people are helping identify those who committed violence, and
the Justice Department is bringing criminal charges against them. Rep.
Jamie Raskin and his colleagues have been holding hearings about the threat
of violent white supremacy and the involvement of extremist militias on
Jan. 6.
But there is much we
don’t know. Why was the Capitol so poorly defended? Were rioters helped by
sympathetic Trump supporters at the Pentagon and in law enforcement
agencies? Did they have help planning their attack from members of Congress
or congressional staff?
Sen. Mitch
McConnell, the leader of the Senate Republicans, is trying to protect
Republicans running for election in 2022 from having to confront the
truth. And while wounded police officers and family members of an
officer who died that day went from office to office asking Republican
senators to support a commission, McConnell was calling in favors to stop
it from happening.
Some other
congressional Republicans have been spitting in the faces of those officers
and family members by downplaying what happened that day. One even said the
rioters were just visiting the Capitol like tourists. How many tourists
bring a gallows and lynching noose with them? How many smash down doors and
windows in their attempt to get their hands on members of Congress?
We cannot let this
happen again. History tells us that the best predictor of an
eventual successful coup is a recently failed one. Militia groups
and other extremists are out there planning more violence, fantasizing
about starting a new civil war.
If we’re going to
stop them, we must learn the whole truth about Jan. 6. We must hold people
accountable. Senate Republicans abused the filibuster to stand in the
way of a Jan. 6 commission, and they will do it again to
block voting rights and other civil rights legislation that has the support
of a majority of Americans and a majority of the Senate. Now, Democrats
must use the power voters gave them and change the rules.
Democracy has
always been fragile. It has always had enemies. Past generations have
improved and preserved it through their vigilance. The future of our nation as a
multiracial, multiethnic democratic society depends on us being
vigilant now. Let your voice be heard.
Ben Jealous serves as president of People For the
American Way and People For the American Way
Foundation. Jealous has decades of experience as a leader,
coalition builder, campaigner for social justice and seasoned nonprofit
executive. In 2008, he was chosen as the youngest-ever president and CEO of
the NAACP. He is a graduate of Columbia University and Oxford, where
he was a Rhodes Scholar, and he has taught at Princeton and the University
of Pennsylvania.
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