Opinion: Promise of Jan. 6 accountability still unfulfilled

Photo by Susan Walsh of The Associated Press / Stephen Parloto of Boulder, Colo., holds a sign on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 2022, ahead of the one year anniversary of the Jan. 6 insurrection.
Photo by Susan Walsh of The Associated Press / Stephen Parloto of Boulder, Colo., holds a sign on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 2022, ahead of the one year anniversary of the Jan. 6 insurrection.

At midnight on Jan. 6, 2021, a good 12 hours before the eruption of historic violence for which the date lives in fresh infamy, the column I submitted began like this:

BREAKING: The United States.

That's it; that's the lede.

OK, no one wants to be told their country is crumbling, but when Peaceful Transfer of Power Day arrives as scheduled on Jan. 6 and the mayor of the nation's capital is requesting hundreds of National Guardsmen, maybe you're a tad anxious that this little unofficial holiday tradition is going to hold up.

The truth is, I wrote that hoping to be dead wrong. I was hoping the worst impulses of a narcissist who'd lost the election would not rise to the level of violence against the Constitution, against democracy, against America, even against his own vice president, who finally certified Joe Biden's victory nearly four hours after midnight had come again.

One year out from it, Donald Trump chuckles on. Trump's last chief of staff, Mark Meadows, has his thumb permanently stuck to the end of his nose. Steve Bannon, the heavyweight champion of poisonous Trump influencers and Jan. 6 architects ("All hell is gonna break loose tomorrow"), is at least indicted, but it hasn't diminished his enjoyment of watching democracy stagger from his blows.

You can honorably argue here at the birth of 2022 that the climate and the virus are bigger stories than the implications and tedious adjudication of those events from a year ago this week, but I would say that this - the Evanescence of Democracy - will be the most important story in a year that's barely a week old.

Jocelyn Benson, the Democratic secretary of state in Michigan who oversaw the vote count there in 2020, told The New York Times in December, "This is a five-alarm fire; if people in general, leaders and citizens, aren't taking this as the most important issue of our time and acting accordingly, we may not be able to ensure democracy prevails in '24."

The immediate exigency is that while some 700 people have been charged in the riot, most of those sentenced, 71 as of this writing, have gotten little or no jail time. The most severe sentence so far has been 63 months, but anyone who feels the 2020 election was stolen - a notion since disproven 100 different ways including by Trump's own lap dog attorney general - or would merely like to steal the next one, is not cowed in the least by the U.S. House Select Committee to Investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the United States Capitol, nor by any action taken thus far by the Justice Department.

The committee has heard from some 300 witnesses, examined thousands of documents, and promises in 2022 to eventually issue a couple of reports.

Whatever they produce, you can be sure it won't be widely read, most particularly by the inveterate non-reader who was the 45th President of the United States. The irony is, examining thousands of documents or more is nice, but Trump is the equivalent of an open book when it comes to Jan. 6.

"They're not taking this White House," he blurted in the hours leading to that day. "We're gonna fight like hell."

Most all of this happened in plain sight in broad daylight.

Mr. Trump summoned his supporters to Washington on the day the electoral votes were to be counted ("be there gonna be wild!"), he sent them to the Capitol ("If you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore"), and he sat quaffing Diet Cokes while the fighting went on for more than three hours on his TV.

Attorney General Merrick Garland on Wednesday spoke about Jan. 6 and, as officials at the Justice Department put it before the speech, would reaffirm "the department's unwavering commitment to defend Americans and American democracy from violence and threats of violence."

That unwavering commitment will almost look legitimate when someone brings the handcuffs.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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