WASHINGTON (AP) — A deeply divided Congress is showing the world a very unsettled view from the U.S. Capitol: Rather than a national crisis that pulls the country together, the deadly riot on Jan. 6, 2021, only seems to have pushed lawmakers further apart.
Some members are planning to mark the anniversary of the Capitol insurrection with a moment of silence. Others will spend the day educating Americans on the workings of democracy.
And still others don’t think the deadliest domestic attack on Congress in the nation’s history needs to be remembered at all.
Where they stand on remembrance can be largely attributed to their political party, a jarring discord that shows the country’s lawmakers remain strikingly at odds over how to unify a torn nation.
The president who had been fairly and legitimately defeated, Donald Trump, told his followers to “fight like hell” to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s election and said he would march with them to the Capitol, though he did not. The result was violence and mayhem that left five people dead in the immediate aftermath, hundreds facing charges and millions of dollars in property damage.
Capitol Riot: One Year Later
A year after Jan. 6, Congress more deeply divided than ever
'I trusted the President': Jan. 6 rioters in their own words
Trump maintains grip on GOP despite violent insurrection
The AP Interview: Pelosi says 'democracy won' on Jan. 6
But the lack of bipartisan resolve to assign responsibility for the siege or...
Read Full Story:
https://apnews.com/article/jan-6-capitol-siege-congress-a7d6f4e19386b70e8126f...