Screenshot: CNN The Jan. 6 committee delivered another flood of revelations in its seventh hearing today, the first to feature a witness who participated in the Capitol attack and another who spent years as the spokesman for a far-right militia whose leader was charged with seditious conspiracy. The big picture: "American carnage, that's Donald Trump's true legacy," Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) argued at the end of the three-hour presentation, hearkening back to a famous line from the former president's 2017 inauguration speech. 4 takeaways1. "Civil war" threat: The committee revealed pro-Trump online spaces went into overdrive after Trump's Dec. 19 tweet calling for a "big protest" in D.C. on Jan. 6, with Raskin reciting a stream of "openly homicidal" and "white nationalist" rhetoric related to rally planning. - On forums like TheDonald.win, users called on Trump supporters to bring body armor, bats, bear spray, zip ties and other weapons that Capitol rioters would later be charged with carrying.
- "I think we need to quit mincing words and just talk about truths: What it was going to be was an armed revolution. ... This could have been the spark that started a new civil war," Jason Van Tatenhove, the former spokesman for the far-right Oath Keepers, testified to the committee.
2. Trump's "ad libs": A draft tweet memorialized in the National Archives indicated Trump had long planned to tell his followers to "march to the Capitol" after his speech at the Ellipse, which the committee claims undermines the defense that the rally simply "got out of hand." - Rep. Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) revealed that Trump ad-libbed numerous lines during his speech — placing repeated emphasis on the call to march, the role of Vice President Mike Pence in "stopping the steal," and the need for his supporters to "fight" and "have courage."
Email from former Trump campaign spokesperson Katrina Pierson to Trump fundraiser Caroline Wren. Courtesy of Jan. 6 committee 3. Controlling the mob: Stephen Ayres, a former Trump supporter who pleaded guilty in June to disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building, testified that he and his associates hadn't planned to go to the Capitol until Trump's speech at the Ellipse "got everyone riled up." - In addition, it was only after Trump's video telling protesters to "go home" — hours into the riot — that the crowd dispersed: "I was hanging on every word he was saying," Ayres said.
4. Cheney's kicker: After the most recent hearing, Trump "tried to call" a witness who has not yet been heard from publicly, committee vice chair Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) revealed in one last bombshell at the close of her remarks. - The witness's lawyer reached out to the committee, which subsequently supplied the information to the Justice Department, Cheney said — potentially escalating Trump's exposure to a witness intimidation investigation.
Go deeper: Full recap, via Axios' Alayna Treene |
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