WASHINGTON â Some lawmakers emotionally recalled the violence. Others said theyâd rather move on. And some said it wasnât violent at all.
The certification Monday of Donald Trumpâs presidential victory further exposed the divide, and the tension, among members of Congress over Jan. 6, 2021 â as Trump has called the bloody attack by his supporters âa day of loveâ and has promised to pardon rioters who have been convicted of crimes related to that day once he is in office.
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Unlike four years ago, when the joint session of Congress to count electoral votes was interrupted by rioters trying to break down the doors, there was very little drama this Jan. 6 and no overt tension in the room as lawmakers read out each stateâs electoral votes. Vice President Kamala Harris gaveled down her own defeat. Democrats did not object to any of the votes.
Standing beside windows where Trumpâs supporters first broke into the building that day, Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer said Democrats want to âserve as an exampleâ for Republicans.
The Democrats lost last year's election, Schumer said, but âwhen you lose an election you roll up your sleeves and try for the next one. You donât deny that you lost.â
The rioters who violently breached the Capitol four years ago, breaking in after a brutal fight with police, were echoing Trumpâs false claims that the election was stolen and that President Joe Bidenâs win was ârigged.â Trump maintained â and still maintains â that he won the election even though it was certified by all 50 states and courts across the country reaffirmed Bidenâs win.
Four years later, the Republican Party is still divided over the attack. On Monday, as they gleefully certified Trumpâs win, some GOP lawmakers made a point of downplaying the violence four years ago, defending the more than 1,250 rioters convicted of crimes.
Rep. Mike Collins, R-Ga., posted on X early Monday morning that âindividuals entered the Capitol, took photos, and explored the building before leaving,â and have since been âhunted downâ and treated unjustly. Just after the joint session ended, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., repeated her plea that all of the rioters be pardoned and said âthis country should never allow this type of abuse of our justice system again.â
Other Republicans remembered the day differently â a signal that Trumpâs pledge to pardon rioters could become politically fraught even within his own party. Itâs unclear, so far, whether he will try to pardon all of them or just those who were not violent.
âI was here,â said Republican South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, one of Trumpâs closest allies. âAsk the cops who got beaten up. Not everybody was violent, but there was definitely violence, and the people who defiled the Capitol and attacked police officers, they deserve to be held accountable.â
Republican Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota said that âthe violence that occurred on that particular day, I will not forget.â
âIt was real,â he said. âAnd we have to recognize that was a very, very bad day in our countryâs history.â
More common are Republicans who donât want to talk about it at all.
âThat was a long day and I donât want to rehash it,â said Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin, who was then in the House and helped blockade the doors as rioters tried to beat them down. He said he hadnât talked about it since the one-year anniversary of the attack.
âThatâs in the past for me,â Mullin said. âI tell people all the time, you canât drive out the rearview mirror.â
New Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters, âI was here, and Iâve said what I have to say about that day, and Iâm now looking forward.â
On possible pardons, âitâs going to be a call that the president has to make,â Thune said.
Democrats marked the fourth anniversary by remembering their own experiences that day, and preparing for Trump's return to office.
Georgia Rep. Hank Johnson said after the session that he was angry that they were there to certify Trumpâs win after what happened last time.
âWe performed our perfunctory duty,â Johnson said. âIt should have been perfunctory four years ago. Iâm angry that it was not.â
Johnson was trapped in the House gallery with other Democrats who were spacing out in the chamber amid the coronavirus pandemic. The group was trapped as people tried to beat the doors down below, and ducked below seats as rioters hunting lawmakers were rattling the doors behind them.
Some members of that group â who have dubbed themselves the âgallery groupâ â gathered for a photo Monday. Washington Rep. Pramila Jayapal posted the photo on X.
âWe will not forget,â she wrote.
Metropolitan Police Officer Daniel Hodges, one of the hundreds of police officers who fought the rioters four years ago, sat in the gallery on Monday as Congress certified Trumpâs win, a guest of California Sen. Adam Schiff.
Hodges, who was captured on video crushed between two doors as some of the rioters beat him, said he found this yearâs proceeding to be âvery dryâ â like it should have been four years ago, he said.
Otherwise, he was marking the day by doing his job, like many of the other officers who spent the day protecting the city and members of Congress.
âI was at work before this and Iâm going back to work afterward,â he said.
