‘He screwed the country’: Trump loyalty
disintegrates
Wednesday’s Capitol Hill riot will reverberate for
years, shaping Trump’s legacy and pushing Republicans to confront the GOP’s
future.
By GABBY
ORR, ANITA KUMAR and MERIDITH MCGRAW
01/06/2021
09:00 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/06/trump-loyalty-capitol-attack-455667
It was, for
many of President Donald Trump’s own allies, the final straw.
What began
as a rally intended to support Trump became a permanent and irreversible stain
on his presidency Wednesday afternoon, as fans of the outgoing president
stormed the U.S. Capitol — shattering windows, prompting evacuations and
injuring law enforcement officials in the process — to temporarily halt the
certification of his opponent’s 2020 victory.
A
distressing scene for many Americans watching from home, the uprising at the
Capitol followed two months of provocation from Trump — subversive rhetoric
about America’s election, threats against GOP figures who didn’t agree,
broadsides against his own vice president. And it followed four years of
rabble-rousing by a president intent on keeping a grip on the GOP, resulting in
a climactic moment on Wednesday that could come to define Trump’s political
future and the direction of the Republican party after he leaves office.
“He screwed
his supporters, he screwed the country and now he’s screwed himself,” said a
2016 Trump campaign official, predicting his former boss would cease to remain
a popular figure in GOP politics after Wednesday.
“Donald
Trump caused this insurrection with lies and conspiracy theories about the
election being rigged against him,” said Scott Jennings, a former aide to
President George W. Bush who is close to the Trump White House. “The election
was not stolen but this madness was fomented by the president and his top
advisers.”
For the
first time in four years, Trump loyalty seemed to crack. Resignations started
at the White House, while even some Republicans called on Trump to resign and
other loyalists implored the president to stand down.
Stephanie
Grisham, the first lady’s chief of staff and one of the longest serving Trump
aides, said she would leave over the incident, while the top two national
security aides and the deputy chief of staff all considered whether to quit,
according to an administration official. Another senior White House official
claimed they would have stepped down if they hadn't already departed. Sen. Tom
Cotton, a 2024 Republican hopeful and prominent Trump ally, said it was
"past time" for the president to accept defeat.
“Every day,
every person chooses to be either part of the problem or part of the solution,”
said former White House assistant press secretary Austin Cantrell. “President
Donald Trump and other Republican leaders should immediately denounce today’s
illegal action as an affront to the American experiment of self-government and
take into account the power their words have to heal or harm our Republic.”
The chaos
began minutes after the House and Senate returned to their separate chambers to
begin debate on the first Republican-led objection to Arizona’s electoral slate
for President-elect Joe Biden. Provoked by the president and his allies — who
encouraged attendees at a “Stop the Steal” event hours earlier to march on the
Capitol as the certification process began — the protesters breached a security
perimeter and poured into the halls of Congress as the president watched from
the Oval Office.
High-profile
Trump supporters, including the president’s eldest son and GOP lawmakers who
were forced to shelter-in-place inside while police drew guns and unleashed
tear gas in an attempt to clear protesters from the Capitol Building, pleaded
with the demonstrators to peacefully disperse and respect law enforcement
officials on the scene.
Yet Trump
remained largely silent.
At the
White House, top aides with Trump inside the executive complex urged the
president to release a statement of his own, according to a person familiar
with the matter. The group of aides was smaller than usual, however, in part
because of the coronavirus pandemic and the recent departure of several senior
staffers for other jobs. Meanwhile, Trump’s most important adviser, his
son-in-law Jared Kushner, was on his way back from the Middle East and his
chief of staff Mark Meadows didn’t respond to questions about Trump’s day.
The result,
as one former senior administration official put it, was the improbability of
an appropriately forceful response from Trump.
It took
approximately two-and-a-half hours from the time protesters first stormed the
Capitol complex for Trump to release a video message — hastily taped outside
the Oval Office — encouraging his supporters to “go home in peace.” But even
then, he continued to feed the false and conspiratorial claims motivating those
who had trekked to Washington in the first place.
“Trump’s
video was an absolute failure of leadership," Jennings said. "It was
half-hearted [and] completely inadequate.”
The former
senior administration official, who was in close contact with advisers around
the president on Wednesday, said it was unlikely Trump would be coaxed into
saying anything beyond the video message and a few tweets.
“I don’t
know who is getting through to him right now,” this person said.
Even after
the video message, Trump seemed unrepentant: “These are the things and events
that happen when a sacred landslide election victory is so unceremoniously
& viciously stripped away,” he tweeted shortly before Twitter locked his
account for 12 hours.
“I don’t
want to talk to him, said one Republican close to Trump, echoing a senior
administration official who described the effort as futile. “What am I going to
say? This is one of those moments when I don’t know if I want to be involved.”
Across the
internet, current and former Trump allies raced to condemn the protests as
jarring scenes of the demonstrators, many clad in MAGA gear, unfolded on
television.
One man was
photographed dangling from the Senate gallery after rioters successfully broke
into the chamber. Another woman was pronounced dead Wednesday evening after
being shot in the chest inside the Capitol Building. World leaders described
the break-in as “disgraceful,” “deeply sad” and “shocking” for the United
States, which has struggled to maintain alliances and wield significant
influence on the global stage during much of Trump’s presidency.
Former New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie — who said he repeatedly tried to get in touch with
Trump on Wednesday as National Guard troops were being dispatched to Washington
alongside backup law enforcement from Virginia and Maryland — laid the blame
squarely on the president for inciting the mob that gathered at the Capitol.
“The
president caused this protest to occur,” Christie told ABC News. “He is the
only one who can make it stop.”
Tom
Bossert, the president's former Homeland Security and Counterterrorism adviser,
said Trump had "undermined American democracy baselessly for months"
and was therefore "culpable for this siege."
After the
president released his brief video Wednesday afternoon, a White House official
said they did not expect further comments on the protests from Trump or his top
aides, even as a 6 p.m. curfew imposed by D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and
increased police presence threatened to give way to potential violent clashes
overnight.
The
Pentagon also activated 1,100 District of Columbia National Guard troops to
other parts around the National Mall to help contain the swarm of protesters —
a move that military leaders said they arrived at after discussing the
situation with Vice President Mike Pence and congressional leaders.
For Trump,
the riots became the second part of a one-two punch after he was widely blamed
for the defeat on Tuesday of Republican Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue
in two Georgia runoff elections.
The outcome
of the two races in a once-solidly Republican state raised questions about the
president’s drag on the GOP since losing the Nov. 3 election.
Trump spent
the weeks leading up to the Georgia contests publicly disparaging the state’s
Republican Gov. Brian Kemp and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger,
including at a Monday night rally where he re-litigated the 2016 election and
said he wouldn’t like his own vice president as much if Pence declined to
exercise unconstitutional powers and help him overturn the election.
The pair of
Republican losses will leave the Senate split 50-50 — with incoming Vice
President Kamala Harris left to cast tie-breaking votes — and guarantee at
least two years of one-party control by Democrats until the 2022 midterm elections.
“This
morning I would have told you the Republican Party is in shambles because of
Donald Trump. Now the entire country is,” said a senior Trump adviser.
In a matter
of days, a Trump 2024 candidacy had gone from feeling imminent to seeming distant.
Wednesday’s events only made it seem more far-fetched — although it's hard to
know if that sense will last.
“I think
nothing is going to happen,” said a Trump friend, before Wednesday. “He won’t
be around in 2024. He’s not going to run.
And even as
the protests were unfolding, Trump continued to wreak havoc on the GOP — this
time accusing his own unswervingly loyal vice president of failing to exhibit
“the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our
Constitution” after Pence confirmed in a letter Wednesday morning that he did
not believe he had “unilateral authority to decide which electoral votes should
be counted.”
In response
to the letter, which was released by the vice president’s team while Trump was
still rallying his supporters at the Ellipse outside the White House, one Pence
ally said it was “the beginning of the end” of Pence’s loyalty to Trump and
“may very well be the end of his political career, too.”
Meanwhile,
throughout the day, Pence appeared to take on much of the coordination that
would traditionally be led by the president in a moment of crisis. In addition
to speaking with defense officials about the deployment of National Guard
troops, Pence fielded phone calls from Trump allies who appeared eager to erase
the president from the picture.
“I just
spoke with Vice President Pence. He is a genuinely fine and decent man. He
exhibited courage today as he did at the Capitol on 9/11 as a Congressman. I am
proud to serve with him,” tweeted Trump’s national security adviser, Robert
O’Brien.
“I
communicated with the vice president early on,” House Minority Leader Kevin
McCarthy told Fox News, saying Pence played a critical role in working with
Capitol Hill police and securing the deployment of the D.C. National Guard.
Pence
spokesperson Devin O'Malley said the vice president would return to the Senate
chamber Wednesday night to resume the certification process, after
congressional leaders announced plans to reconvene at 8 p.m.
"VP
was in regular contact [with] House & Senate leadership, Cap Police, DOJ
& DoD to facilitate efforts to secure the Capitol & reconvene Congress.
And now we will finish the people's business," O'Malley wrote, notably
omitting any contact between Pence and Trump.
Daniel
Lippman contributed to this report.
The day Trump broke the GOP
The riot at the Capitol is quickly fueling a reckoning
over Trumpism.
By BURGESS
EVERETT, MARIANNE LEVINE and MELANIE ZANONA
01/06/2021
11:57 PM EST
Updated:
01/07/2021 02:01 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/06/donald-trump-broke-gop-trumpism-capitol-455718
Republicans
started the day losing the Senate. They ended it with President Donald Trump’s
supporters losing their minds.
Jan. 6,
2021 might have been remembered for an intraparty battle over whether to
certify Joe Biden’s election win or who to blame for the Georgia defeats. But
instead it will go down as the day that broke the Republican Party as we know
it and began the GOP’s ultimate reckoning with Trumpism.
It
literally took a riot of Trump supporters in the Capitol for many Republicans
to finally confront the defeated president — a moment of bedlam that put those
GOP lawmakers’ own lives at risk. After his supporters stormed into the
Capitol, vandalized the building and fought with police officers, several
typically strong allies turned on Trump.
Sen. Tom
Cotton (R-Ark.), one of the most steadfast supporters of the president, said
bluntly that “it’s past time for the president to accept the results of the election,
quit misleading the American people, and repudiate mob violence.” Sen. Roy
Blunt (R-Mo.) said he didn’t want to hear anything more from Trump: “It was a
tragic day and he was part of it.”
“I've been
here a long time,” added Blunt, a former House majority leader. “This might be
the day I have the most concern about what America projected to the rest of the
world today.”
And House
GOP Conference Chair Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who has carefully crafted her
criticism of Trump over the past year, did not mince words: “There is no
question that the president formed the mob, the president incited the mob, the
president addressed the mob. He lit the flame,” Cheney said on Fox News,
speaking from a secure location after being evacuated.
Wednesday’s
violent episode was the culmination of two months of Trump stoking the flames
by making false allegations of widespread voter fraud and refusing to concede
the election. While most Senate Republicans did not adopt Trump’s rhetoric, the
majority of them waited until the Dec. 14 Electoral College vote to acknowledge
Biden as the president-elect, following a string of Trump losses in court.
And even
for weeks afterward, most Republicans declined to condemn Trump’s language or
call for a peaceful transfer of power. On Wednesday, that finally changed, and
even those who had recognized Biden took their criticism of Trump to a new
level.
"We
witnessed today the damage that can result when men in power and responsibility
refuse to acknowledge the truth. We saw bloodshed because the demagogue chose
to spread falsehoods and sow distrust of his own fellow Americans,” fumed Sen.
Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), who had supported Trump.
Four years
after Trump was elected, Republicans have now lost the White House, the House
of Representatives and the Senate. Trump has signaled his plans to remain a
force in the GOP, but now the party must decide whether to continue embracing
the ousted president or finally move on. Over the course of his presidency,
Trump portrayed every issue as a personal loyalty test and few Republicans
challenged him that were still seeking to continue their political career.
"I
don't think there's any question about that," said Senate Majority Whip
John Thune (R-S.D.), when asked if it was time to move on from Trump. "Our
identity for the past several years has been built around an individual and we
got to get back to where it's built around a set of of ideas and principles and
policies. And I'm sure those conversations will be held, but it needs to happen
pretty soon."
But the
plan to object to the certification of the Electoral College was too much for
many in the GOP. Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), a former chief of staff to Sen. Ted
Cruz, acknowledged that his move against Trump "may well sign my political
death warrant. So be it." The speech earned him applause from his
Democratic colleagues.
Cotton
singled out his colleagues, among them Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Cruz,
who had been leading the charge in the Senate to object to the certification of
Biden’s wins. He asked that “the senators and representatives who fanned the
flames by encouraging the president and leading their supporters to believe
that their objections could reverse the election results should withdraw those
objections.”
In that
statement, Cotton sounded a bit like Mitt Romney. The Utah senator may be a
different generation of Republican and not a Trump supporter, but on this
issue, he and Cotton were aligned.
The GOP
Trump backers who sought to block Biden’s certification will “forever be seen
as being complicit in an unprecedented attack against our democracy,” Romney
said, after glaring at Hawley. “They will be remembered for their role in this
shameful episode in American history.”
Romney and
Cotton got their wish. Opponents of certifying Biden’s win melted away after
the day of sheer chaos, panic and fear in the Capitol. Sen. Ron Johnson
(R-Wis.) said that “obviously in light of events, there’s a little bit of a
different attitude.”
“Today
changed things drastically. Whatever point you made before, that should
suffice,” said Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.), who had previously opposed certifying
Biden’s victory. “Get this ugly day behind us.”
Ultimately,
just six Republicans supported the challenge to Arizona’s certification. The
number was projected to be twice as high before the riot. But nevertheless,
Hawley plotted to still contest Pennsylvania's results.
In perhaps
the most stunning sign of how quickly the Republican Party’s stance had
changed, Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.) withdrew her objections to certification
just hours after losing her seat to Democrat Raphael Warnock. She earned a
smattering of applause after she said she could not “in good conscience” object
to the electors. Sens. Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), Marsha
Blackburn (R-Tenn.) and James Lankford (R-OKla.) also reversed course and said
they’d do the same.
It was a
day Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was already dreading, but it ended
up so much worse than he could have ever imagined. He warned his caucus last
month that challenging the election results on Jan. 6 would be a “terrible
vote” and framed it as a vote of conscience. At the outset of Wednesday’s
session, the Kentucky Republican was unequivocal and played a leading role in pushing
back against Trump’s conspiracy theories.
“This will
be the most important vote I’ll ever cast,” McConnell said, just before the
rioters stormed the Senate floor. “I will not pretend such a vote would be a
harmless protest gesture while relying on others to do the right thing.”
The entire
GOP, however, has not broken free of Trump’s grip.
Across the
Capitol, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and House Minority Whip Steve
Scalise (R-La.) both voted for the challenge to Arizona’s electoral votes,
along with a majority of House Republicans. And even before the Capitol
descended into chaos, some GOP members were privately grumbling that McCarthy
had been counselling some of the freshman Republicans to join some of the
objections.
McCarthy
said he had experienced “the saddest day I’ve ever had serving as a member of
this institution,” but he placed no blame on Trump’s shoulders.
Rep. Matt
Gaetz (R-Fla.) went further, suggesting without evidence that some of the
rioters “were masquerading as Trump supporters and in fact were members of the
violent terrorist group antifa.” He was met with groans and boos on the House
floor.
Rep. Adam
Kinzinger (R-Ill.) — who has long condemned Trump’s dangerous rhetoric — called
on McCarthy and McConnell to “forcefully denounce” Trump’s actions. He also
said in another tweet: “Leaders that led this should all resign so the adults
and truth-tellers can #RestoreOurGOP.”
And the
criticism wasn’t just coming from the usual corners of the GOP. Rep. Brian
Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), who doesn’t usually make waves on Capitol Hill, said Trump
has been "lying" to his supporters and "owns
responsibility" for today's "coup attempt."
Freshman
Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), who just recaptured a GOP seat in a hard-won race,
directly pleaded with Trump: “Mr. President, enough is enough. This is not a
protest, this is anarchy. Get off Twitter and work to restore peace to the
Capitol.”
Even Sen.
Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a close Trump ally who even inquired about election
procedures in Georgia on Trump’s behalf, has had it. In a fiery floor speech,
the South Carolina senator concluded: “All I can say is count me out, enough is
enough.”
“I, above
all others in this body need to say this, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were
lawfully elected and will become the president and the vice president of the
United States on Jan. 20,” he said.


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