Ballot cleanser
This week's shambolic Speaker of the House elections proved a lot about the mayhem we should expect from the new governing majority in the GOP House of Representatives. If legislative chaos is your jam, you're in luck: You'll be reading a lot about debt limit crises, government shutdowns, and nihilistic power moves over the next two years.
But McCarthy's inglorious gavel grab over multiple failed ballots reveals something more grievous on this anniversary of Jan. 6. Two years after the horrifying culmination of the plot to overthrow the presidential election, the GOP lawmakers at the center of the attempted coup now have more power, not less.
Eighteen of the 20 Republicans who tied the House in knots by blocking McCarthy are election-deniers. That's not especially remarkable, given that 139 GOP House members voted against certifying Joe Biden's victory on Jan. 6, 2021. But in the ranks of McCarthy's antagonists you'll also find some of the key figures of the January 6 committee's report.
There's Rep. Matt Gaetz, who was so confident his role in the coup was legit that he "asked for a "very, very broad pardon" (pg. 121). Rep. Andy Biggs did too (pg. 121) and also texted former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows that GOP-controlled states should simply appoint electors (pg. 267). There's Rep. Ralph Norman, who famously and urgently texted Meadows before Biden's inauguration insisting that Trump impose "Marshall law." And of course there's Rep. Scott Perry, an anti-McCarthy ringleader who was so deep in the coup plot that he stars in entire sections of the report (pg. 382, and keep reading).
It's not all that shocking that coup plotters are causing disarray on TV (with a four-vote majority, any five GOP lawmakers can do that.) What's far more important is the chaos they're now empowered to wield under McCarthy, or any other speaker.
After this week's carnival, what goes through a GOP leader's mind when they consider tapping the brakes on discrediting the Jan. 6 investigation, or on firing a future Trump prosecutor, or even on impeaching Merrick Garland? What leader hoping for a future in this GOP would err on the side of the rule of law? And if McCarthy agrees to new rules allowing any one member to move to depose him, how much would you trust the unreformed insurrectionists who promise not to abuse that power?
To be fair, McCarthy counts several pro-coup lawmakers among his supporters, too. This week Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene parlayed her role as conspiracy theorist and internet troll into a position of real congressional power as Donald Trump's pro-McCarthy viceroy.
It shows that two years after he sent a mob to attack the Capitol, Trump's anti-democratic chaos-agents in that building are more powerful than ever. If you're looking for real accountability on this Jan. 6 anniversary, you won't yet find it in the House.
Rusty medals
They're commemorating the Jan. 6 anniversary over at the White House today, where President Biden is keen to give pro-democracy Republicans some bipartisan love. A bunch of election heroes are set to receive the Presidential Citizens Medal, including a host of U.S. Capitol Police Officers and Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, the Fulton County election workers who sued One America News and Rudy Giuliani for defaming them with election lies, and who Trump continues to harass to this day.
Former Arizona GOP House speaker Rusty Bowers, who lost his seat after resisting a post-election onslaught from Giuliani and Trump to illegally overturn the election is getting a medal too.
"I will not do it," Bowers later testified he told Trump. After appearing in the January 6 committee, Bowers lost his seat to a Trumpist primary challenger who declared the election "stolen."
About Schmidt
Former Philadelphia election commissioner Al Schmidt is also getting a presidential medal at the White House today. You might remember that Schmidt was featured in Madeleine May's VICE News Tonight "Breaking the Vote" piece on election workers who were threatened and targeted by Trump and his supporters.
Awards are cool, but Schmidt was also just appointed as Pennsylvania's Secretary of State by newly-minted Governor Josh Shapiro. I texted Schmidt to ask if he felt vindicated being appointed to run PA's elections and receiving a presidential commendation, all after insurrectionists and trolls targeted his family.
"Exactly why my family will be attending the ceremony," he replied.
The Proud before the fall
We're still waiting for the trial of five Proud Boys for seditious conspiracy and other charges to get underway. As of this writing, jury selection is still creeping along in the feds' case against former leader Enrique Tarrio and other Proud Boys. The sides seem to be having some difficulty findings jurors in the District of Columbia who don't already have strong opinions about Proud Boys, who've been involved in street violence there in the past (Tarrio was ordered out of DC just before Jan. 6, for burning a church's Black Lives Matter banner in 2019.)
Tarrio's co-defendants include Dominic Pezzola, aka "Spazzo," who you might remember as the Jan. 6 rioter smashing the Capitol window with a stolen police riot shield. Read Tess Owen's latest look at the charges and strategies Tarrio and his co-defendants are likely to face once a jury is seated and the evidence starts flowing.
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