Tuesday, February 16, 2021

On Politics: A ‘9/11 Commission’ for the Capitol Riot?

After Trump's acquittal, support is growing for a federal inquiry into the events of Jan. 6.
Doug Mills/The New York Times

Former President Donald Trump was acquitted on Saturday of inciting insurrection, after most Senate Republicans decided against convicting him. But not everyone is ready to turn the page just yet on the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Support is growing in Washington for creating a commission to investigate the violent attack, and the events leading up to it.

Any such inquiry — which would be similar to the federal commission that was set up after Sept. 11, 2001 — would almost certainly turn some of its attention to Trump's role in inciting the attack. But it would also look more broadly at the administrative failures by federal and local law enforcement agencies, as well as the House and Senate sergeants-at-arms.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi wrote a letter to her colleagues yesterday saying that the House would consider legislation to form a commission. And President Biden's press secretary, Jen Psaki, said today that he "would support" creating such an entity, though she noted that it was ultimately Congress's prerogative.

"He backs efforts to shed additional light on the facts, to ensure something like that never happens again," Psaki said.

Representative Katherine Clark, the assistant speaker of the House, told Politico today that she expected to see "bipartisan support" for the commission. "Americans understand what is at stake here, and this is the next step to getting to truth and accountability," she said.

Is Clark right that there will be bipartisan interest in a federal inquiry? Maybe. Forty-three of the Senate's 50 Republicans voted on Saturday to acquit Trump — denying Democrats the two-thirds majority that they needed to convict him — but there were mixed emotions, even among those who voted against holding him to account.

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In a whiplash-inducing speech on the Senate floor, immediately after voting to acquit Trump, Senator Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader, issued a scathing condemnation of the former president. He said there was "no question — none — that President Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events" of Jan. 6.

Like many Senate Republicans, McConnell would be happy if Trump never regained his place in the Republican Party elite — but with a wide majority of G.O.P. voters continuing to support the former president, purging Trump without alienating the party's base would require some high-wire political acrobatics.

And late Tuesday afternoon, Trump fired a blistering attack at McConnell, issuing a long statement filled with insults — at one point, he called the minority leader a "dour, sullen and unsmiling political hack" — that urged Senate Republicans to find a new leader.

For McConnell and other Republicans who want Trump gone, a commission to investigate the riot might be a broad and nonaccusatory way to get the ball rolling on a process that could result in an official reckoning with Trump's role in the events of Jan. 6.

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Senator Lindsey Graham, a longtime defender of Trump who voted on Saturday to acquit him, said on Fox News the next day that he would support a congressional inquiry. "We need a 9/11 commission to find out what happened and make sure it never happens again, and I want to make sure that the Capitol footprint can be better defended next time," Graham said.

But the commission's report would probably not be legally binding, and it wouldn't necessarily include recommendations on how to hold former officials accountable for their role in stoking the violence.

Some legal scholars have begun to suggest that the 14th Amendment could be used to keep Trump out of office, if he were to run again. Passed in the wake of the Civil War, the amendment includes a provision banning any public official who "engaged in insurrection or rebellion" from holding office in the future. Since that language is already enshrined in the Constitution, simply passing a congressional resolution declaring that Trump's actions amounted to insurrection could place a significant obstacle in his path back to public office. But there's been little indication that Congress plans to take this step.

And then there's the possibility of civil suits that could seek damages from Trump. The N.A.A.C.P. this morning filed a suit against Trump and his personal lawyer, Rudolph Giuliani, arguing that they had violated the Ku Klux Klan Act — which was passed in 1871, not long after the 14th Amendment — by stirring up violent conspiracy theories that interfered with Congress's constitutional duties.

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The suit was filed in federal court on behalf of Representative Bennie Thompson, Democrat of Mississippi, who is seeking compensatory and punitive damages.

At a CNN town hall tonight, Biden will look to refocus Americans on the challenges at hand.

Now that the impeachment trial is over, Biden is looking to turn the nation's attention to confronting the main challenges that he had promised to address as a presidential candidate: the coronavirus pandemic and the economic downturn.

Right now, he's on his way to Milwaukee for a CNN town-hall-style event, where he'll be discussing his proposed $1.9 trillion relief bill and his administration's effort to help schools safely reopen across the country.

This is Biden's first trip as president beyond the Washington area, Delaware or the presidential retreat at Camp David. On Thursday, he'll go to Kalamazoo, Mich., to tour a Pfizer manufacturing site where the company is producing its coronavirus vaccine. At tonight's event, Biden will almost certainly face questions about the vaccine rollout, which has continued to suffer from holdups and limited availability.

But he'll at least have some good news to share: In her remarks to reporters today, Psaki said that the federal government would begin distributing 13.5 million doses of coronavirus vaccine a week, up from the current number — 11 million.

The White House also announced today that it was extending a federal moratorium on foreclosures through the end of June, offering assistance to homeowners who are struggling to meet their mortgage payments amid the pandemic.

House committees have already begun debating parts of the $1.9 trillion bill, and Democratic leaders in the chamber have said that they plan to bring the bill to the floor for a vote by Friday.

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