Trump Calls It ‘Foolish’ Not to Have More GOP on Jan. 6 Panel – You Can Thank the House Republicans for that Decision!

Jan. 6 subpoenas, witnesses: Who the House committee wants to hear from :  NPR

House January 6th Committee – Rep. Adam Kinzinger and Rep. Liz Cheney are 2nd and 3rd from the right.

Dear Commons Community,

As the House Congressional Committee on the January 6th  insurrection heats up (there is another televised hearing today), Republican leaders are trying to undermine the integrity of the proceedings by claiming that it is not bipartisan. Donald Trump weighed in on the issue yesterday and said it was a  “Very, very foolish.”

However,  it was his party, influenced by him personally, that stonewalled participation, apparently hoping the probe would die on the vine.  As reported by the Huffington Post.

“A bad decision was made,” Trump said in an interview with conservative radio host Wayne Allyn Root on his program, “Raw & Unfiltered.” It was a “bad decision not to have [Republican] representation on that committee,” he added.

Trump emphasized: “That was a very, very foolish decision.”

Now, he claims, the investigation is a “one-sided witch hunt.”

The House select committee was formed last year after Senate Republicans voted to block creation of a bipartisan 9/11-style commission to probe the Capitol riot.

Trump at the time called such a commission a “Democrat trap.”

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) had claimed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) wasn’t negotiating in “good faith” on commission details. But Pelosi agreed that members be divided evenly between parties, and that unanimous agreement would be required before any subpoenas were issued.

Democrats then sought to form a bipartisan House select committee. But Republicans stonewalled that, too, after Pelosi refused committee slots to two of five lawmakers recommended by McCarthy: Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio and Jim Banks of Indiana.

Both men had voted to overturn the results of the presidential election based on lies that the vote was rigged, which Pelosi said would undermine the integrity of the panel.

McCarthy then yanked all five of his recommendations and stopped cooperating to create a bipartisan panel.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) and Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) are currently the only Republicans participating with seven Democrats on the House select committee investigating the attack on the Capitol.

Now a string of Republicans from the Trump administration are testifying against their former boss about his role inciting the violent storming of the Capitol last year.

According to a new ABC New/Ipsos poll, 60% of Americans surveyed believe the panel is conducting a “fair and impartial” investigation, and 58% believe that Trump should be charged for his role in the insurrection.

The GOP and Trump had their chance and blew it.  Don’t cry about it now!

Tony

2 comments

  1. Good hearing from you, Barbara,

    I understand your comment. I guess I could have been more selective that the “House Republican leadership and Trump had their chance…”

    Tony

  2. I know you are just following the protocols, but it seems unproductive to clump former President Trump and the GOP into one swaddle. We are (still) a two-party system. I’m a registered Democrat and have only rarely in my 73 years voted GOP. But the Democrats have also turned out elected officials who have disgraced the party, NYC, NY State, and the country. Our former POTUS may hit on the nonobserving ego side of narcissism, but remember that Jeffrey Epstein also had powerful friends – mostly Democrats. The current mess will not be resolved with slogans and untidy classifications.