The far-right coordinated the assault on Capitol Hill after a message from Donald Trump perceived as a ‘call to arms’, a group of elected officials investigating how the former president tried to stay in power said on Tuesday. .
This parliamentary committee – seven Democrats and two Republicans repudiated by their party – detailed during its seventh hearing the pressure exerted by the billionaire, from the presidential election of 2020 until the assault on the Capitol by his supporters on January 6. 2021.
At the heart of the investigators’ presentation: a post on Twitter by the ex-businessman which dates from December 19, 2020, in which the billionaire calls on the crowd to gather in the American capital on the day of the certification of the Joe Biden victory.
“Big demonstration in Washington on January 6th. Be there, it will be crazy, ”wrote the tenant of the White House on the social network, his favorite megaphone at the time.
“This post has served as a call to action and, in some cases, a call to arms, for many of President Trump’s loyal supporters,” said Democrat Stephanie Murphy.
Supporting videos and montages, the commission detailed how radio hosts, youtubers and conservative personalities had immediately relayed Donald Trump’s call. One of them even mentions the possibility of “attacking” the Capitol.
Donald Trump’s message also “electrified and galvanized his supporters, especially dangerous extremist groups like the Oath Keepers, the Proud Boys and other groups of racists and white nationalists ready to fight against the government”, accused elected Democrat Jamie Raskin.
The group of elected officials has indeed described how these radical groups coordinated ahead of “January 6” using encrypted messaging and online forums. And have exchanged regularly with a close friend of Donald Trump, Roger Stone.
“They may not like to call themselves a militia, but they are,” said Jason Van Tatenhove, a former spokesman for the Oath Keepers. “It’s a violent militia. »
Arriving in the American capital with paramilitary equipment, the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys quickly interested federal prosecutors.
Several of their members have been charged in recent months with “sedition,” a very rare charge that involves conspiring against the government or one of its laws.
The parliamentary committee also received testimony on Tuesday from a repentant Trumpist, who entered the Capitol on January 6, 2021 and who has since lost his job and was forced to sell his house. “It changed my life, and certainly not for the better,” said Stephen Ayres, who went to hug several police officers injured during the assault on the Capitol at the end of the session.
Trump, “not a child”
The “January 6” commission finally wanted to sweep away the possibility that Donald Trump could have been manipulated by anyone in his maneuvers to have the result of the 2020 election annulled.
“President Trump is a 76-year-old man, not an easy child to impress,” assured elected Liz Cheney, one of the few Republicans to have agreed to sit on this commission.
“Donald Trump cannot evade his responsibilities by being deliberately blind,” she warned, at a time when some are calling for the former president to be charged for his post-election maneuvers.
The Republican billionaire, who openly flirts with the idea of running for president in 2024, vehemently denounces the work of the commission, calling its members Tuesday “politicians” and “thugs”.
His party, which he still controls with an iron fist, has already promised to bury the conclusions of this commission if the Conservatives were to take control of the House of Representatives during the mid-term legislative elections. , in November.