The Jan 6th Insurrection Was The Centerpiece of a Failed Coup by Donald Trump

My colleagues David, Matt and Josh have each addressed this question of the scope of the Jan 6th committee in different ways on the site this morning. I wanted to add my voice to theirs and add some thoughts of my own.

Especially Republicans, but not only Republicans, want to focus any investigation on the narrow questions of the security breach itself. How did the insurrectionists manage to enter the Capitol complex? This is wrong and insufficient on many counts, not least of which is that we basically already know the answer. Just as important it focuses the inquiry on the possible shortcomings of some of the primary victims – Capitol Police officers who failed to protect the premises.

Continue reading “The Jan 6th Insurrection Was The Centerpiece of a Failed Coup by Donald Trump”

Bipartisanship Needs to Die So Our Country Can Thrive

This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis. 

As Congress and the Biden Administration engage in increasingly frantic negotiations around a bipartisan infrastructure bill, many of us are left wondering: Is any of this worth it?

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) doesn’t believe so. The Minority Leader told a Kentucky audience earlier this month the “era of bipartisanship” was over as he prepared for “a hell of a fight” over the bipartisan infrastructure bill.

The spending side of the bipartisan framework is insufficient on its own, but Democrats know it could fit as one part of an overall package alongside a budget reconciliation bill. But if Republicans refuse to meet the needs of the American people, do we really need them to be part of passing a critically important bill?

The crises we face are too urgent to hold onto the idea that getting things done in a particular manner is more important than simply getting things done. Bipartisanship does not work in the 21st century, is not valued by voters, and is not necessary for major policy changes. If anything, the misplaced emphasis on “reaching across the aisle” hampers real change.

Republicans are not acting in good faith.

Democrats appealed to bipartisanship over and over last cycle, while Republicans painted Democrats as extremists and radicals. That same bad faith transaction also repeats itself in our legislative process.

At first, the 11 Republicans and 10 Democrats in the Senate who endorsed the initial bipartisan infrastructure proposal signaled their support for the new framework as well. But following statements from President Biden, Speaker Pelosi, and Majority Leader Schumer emphasizing the bill must move alongside a partisan reconciliation bill, some Republicans said they were ready to walk away. They did this week, at least when it came down to invoking cloture on the bill to open it up for debate, feigning outrage over Schumer’s deadline and requesting more time to sort out various payfors that they’ve already been negotiating for weeks. We predicted this from the start.

Republicans are not engaging in a good faith effort to pass impactful legislation. They are aiming to pit the watered-down bipartisan proposal against the reconciliation bill — the one that could actually rebuild this country. This is true whether we are talking about infrastructure or the right to vote. President Biden recently called out the GOP’s role in the constant barrage of restrictive voting rights laws across the country, describing it as the “most significant test of Democracy since the Civil War.” If Republicans were interested in bipartisanship and what is actually best for Americans, passing critical legislation like this wouldn’t be so contentious.

But Remember: Republicans are only relevant to this process to the degree that moderate Democrats allow them to be. Democratic leadership controls what bills come to the floor on Capitol Hill and when they arrive. The real issue is whether Democrats can remain unified. Sens. Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ), in particular, are enabling Republican relevancy, but to what end?

Major policy changes do not require bipartisanship.

While there is a myth that major policy proposals require broad bipartisan consensus, when we look at history it’s clear that is not entirely true.

The original passage of Social Security and Medicare in 1965 included many more Republican votes than we typically see today, and in 2003, Democrats supported implementing George W. Bush’s Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit. But the lead-up to the passage of these programs was marked by bitter partisan warfare and rhetoric, and ultimately it was much more a party-line vote than not.

To save our country bipartisanship must die. 

The question Democrats should be asking ourselves right now is whether we are addressing the defining problems on which Biden hinged his campaign: COVID-19 response, climate, economic inequality, and racial justice. Somehow the process by which things get done in Congress has become more important than actually getting things done. We cannot continue to fail to deliver change for the American people, as we continue to deal with the fallout of a devastating global pandemic, no less.

If Democrats aren’t confident in the veracity of their ideas — and the support of the 90 million Americans who voted for Democrats in the last three cycles, 10 million more than GOP voters — then they don’t deserve to govern in their name.

Democrats have a responsibility to drive forward the mandate of the American people. They should embrace it without fear. Because if Democrats enact real change and succeed in telling that story clearly, the votes will follow in 2022 and beyond.

 


Jenifer Fernandez Ancona is Vice President of Political & Narrative Strategy at Way to Win.

Go Big Or Go Home: Focusing Only On Jan. 6 Misses The Broader Threat To The Republic

(This post has been updated.)

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things.

Democracy On The Line

A big day ahead as the House select committee investigating the insurrection holds its first hearing Tuesday. One crucial outstanding question: Will the committee tackle the entirety of the Big Lie-driven conspiracy to overturn the 2020 election, or focus narrowly on the events of Jan. 6?

  • TPM’s Matt Shuham has an ambitious new story out this morning on what a thorough investigation of the entire conspiracy to subvert the 2020 election would look like. Give it a read!
  • The select committee seems determined to focus on Jan. 6 as a security breach, rather than the culmination of a months-long effort to delegitimize, undermine, interfere with and ultimately overturn the 2020 election.
  • Committee chair Bennie Thompson (D-MS) declared in a WaPo op-ed that “nothing will be off-limits,” but it’s not clear if the committee is prepared to grapple with the scope of the Trump effort to seize and retain power.
  • Will the committee probe Trump’s shenanigans in Georgia?
    • Trump’s calls to pressure the secretary of state in Georgia to find more votes for him
    • The reported scheme to remove the acting attorney general in favor of a lower level official who would put the weight of the Justice Department behind Trump’s bogus election fraud claims
    • The resignation of the U.S. attorney in Atlanta and the installation of a Trump loyalist
  • Will the committee call Gen. Milley to testify?
    • Milley, the chairman the Joint Chiefs of Staff no less, reportedly feared a coup.
    • All the living former secretaries of defense penned a letter warning of dire things afoot at the Pentagon.
    • In his waning days, Trump was installing or attempting to install loyalists at DoD and CIA.
  • Will committee examine all the ways in which Trump used or attempted to use the powers of his office to hold onto power?
  • NYT obtained a letter from the Biden Justice Department to former Trump officials saying they are free to testify to the committees investigating Jan. 6.
  • The announced witnesses for Tuesday’s scheduled hearing reflect the committee’s narrow focus on the events of Jan. 6
    • Capitol Police officers Harry Dunn and Aquilino Gonell
    • DC Metro Police Department officers Michael Fanone and Daniel Hodges

Oy, Now They’re ‘Political Prisoners’

The House wackadoodle caucus is counter-programming the opening hearing of the  select committee with a press conference outside Main Justice to draw attention to “the treatment of January 6th prisoners.”

  • “One would expect to see abuses of political prisoners in tyrannical third-world countries, not the United States,” caucus chair Louie Gohmert (R-TX) said in a statement.
  • Among the announced attendees, in addition to Gohmert: Reps. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), Paul Gosar (R-AZ), and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA).

Keep An Eye On This

The criminal case against Tom Barrack continues to unfold slowly:

  • TPM’s Josh Kovensky attended Barrack’s arraignment yesterday in Brooklyn.
  • A newly unsealed case from 2019 against one of the key figures in the Barrack scandal offers interesting new details about the alleged foreign influence scheme.

Puzzling Over This One

The conservative strategist running for governor in Pennsylvania who reportedly drove several miles with a motorcycle stuck to the grill of his car did not hit or kill the motorcyclist, his lawyer said.

Mike Enzi, 1944-2021

The former Republican senator from Wyoming, who retired earlier this year, has died following a bicycle crash near his home.

‘Why Would You Do That To A Grandmother?’

Former Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA), 80, was uninjured in a robbery and assault in Oakland.

Who’s Gonna Call It

When can we declare the bipartisan infrastructure talks in the Senate dead and move on?

Sarah Huckabee Joins The GOP’s Big Vaccine Switcheroo

The former White House press secretary and current candidate for governor is urging Arkansans to get what she cleverly dubs the “Trump vaccine.”

  • Huckabee touts the Trump family’s own inoculations: “If getting vaccinated was safe enough for them, I felt it was safe enough for me.” 
  • She goes down swinging though, blaming vaccine hesitancy on the usual right-wing rogues’ gallery: Fauci, Biden, Harris, the news media, and the “expert class.”

Must Read

“‘We’re f—ed’: Dems fear turnout catastrophe from GOP voting laws

Coup Joke Kills

Upon receiving an AR-15 as a gift at a California church, former Trump National Security Adviser Mike Flynn said with a smile, “Maybe I’ll find somebody in Washington, D.C.”

 

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Does The Jan. 6 Committee Have What It Takes To Investigate The Big Lie?

As the Jan. 6 committee holds its first hearing Tuesday, lawmakers’ primary focus will be the storming of the Capitol. Law enforcement witnesses will discuss how that day unfolded, and what they saw as they defended the building against the rioters who flooded in, seeking to confront members of Congress.

Continue reading “Does The Jan. 6 Committee Have What It Takes To Investigate The Big Lie?”

Chair Of Jan. 6 Committee Offers Insight Into The Panel’s Subpoena Plans

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS), who chairs the House select committee investigating the events of Jan. 6, signaled that the panel is willing to subpoena members of Congress or former President Trump in an interview with the Wall Street Journal on Monday. Continue reading “Chair Of Jan. 6 Committee Offers Insight Into The Panel’s Subpoena Plans”

Where Things Stand: Sinister Counter-Programming

The first hearing of the House’s Jan. 6 select committee starts bright and early Tuesday morning, focused on testimony from key law enforcement witnesses who were defending the Capitol during the mob attack. And we’re expecting varying degrees of hay-making and counter-programming from the GOP.

Continue reading “Where Things Stand: Sinister Counter-Programming”

Candidate Under Investigation in PA Road Fatality is Vice Chair of CPAC

You see this story about the gubernatorial candidate from Pennsylvania who’s being investigated for his involvement in a fatal motorcycle accident. He apparently drove for miles after the accident with the motorcycle stuck to the front of his car. Charlie Gerow insists he wasn’t the “cause” of the accident. As I said, his role in the accident is currently being investigated by Pennsylvania State Police.

But TPM Reader BH points out that Gerow is not just a candidate for governor. He’s the Vice Chair of the American Conservative Union, the group that puts on CPAC.
Continue reading “Candidate Under Investigation in PA Road Fatality is Vice Chair of CPAC”

McCarthy Dismisses GOPers Who Don’t Buy The Big Lie As ‘Pelosi Republicans’

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) on Monday took aim at Reps. Liz Cheney (R-WY) and Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) for accepting House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-CA) offer to join the select committee investigating the events of Jan. 6. Continue reading “McCarthy Dismisses GOPers Who Don’t Buy The Big Lie As ‘Pelosi Republicans’”