On a day of high ceremony, a pro-Trump mob overran police barricades and invaded the U.S. Capitol while lawmakers inside were meeting to certify the victory of President-elect Joe Biden. - With rioters loose inside, police locked the House and Senate chamber doors as some lawmakers took cover and others evacuated. The mob banged on the chamber doors, breaking the glass. Reporters inside the Capitol said they heard shots fired. Smoke billowed outside.
- The National Guard was called in to try to help retake the Capitol.
Behind the scenes: A White House official told Jonathan Swan that while the protests rolled on the TV in President Trump's private dining room, he was preoccupied by his anger about Vice President Pence — who was fulfilling his constitutional duty by presiding over a joint congressional session to certify Electoral College results. - Trump didn't want to condemn his supporters so ended up releasing, under duress, a statement in which he repeated his false claim that the election was stolen.
The big picture: It was a violent culmination of Trump's years of stoking grievances among his supporters, using Twitter and rallies to argue that they can't trust the American government — or anyone but him. - Trump belatedly spoke to supporters by video from the White House, but he didn't condemn the violence. "You have to go home now," he said. "We love you. You're very special. … I know how you feel."
- In Trump's video message, he repeated his false claim that the November election was "fraudulent," which former Attorney General William Barr has said is not true.
Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, a close Trump ally who was sheltering in place when the Capitol locked down, told ABC News in a live phone interview that he had called the president and "begged him to go talk to the nation — don't do it by Twitter." - In an earlier live phone interview with CBS News, McCarthy said the situation within the Capitol still wasn't controlled: "Help is needed."
With silence from the White House as the mayhem unfolded on live TV, Biden went before cameras in Wilmington, Delaware, and said, "This is not dissent. It's disorder. It's chaos. It borders on sedition." - Raising his voice, Biden added: "And it must end now."
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