‘Seek the truth’: Pelosi forms panel to investigate Capitol riot

US Republicans blocked a bill to create a bipartisan commission; the top House Democrat moves forward without them.

United States House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced on Thursday that she's creating a special committee to investigate the January 6 attack on the US Capitol [Alex Brandon/AP Photo]

United States House Speaker Nancy Pelosi made it official Thursday that she is creating a special committee to investigate the attack on the US Capitol, saying it is “imperative that we seek the truth”.

The new committee comes after Senate Republicans blocked a House-passed bill that would have set up a bipartisan commission to investigate the attack.

A violent mob of then-President Donald Trump’s supporters overran the police on January 6, broke into the building and hunted for lawmakers as they tried to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s presidential election victory.

The violence left five dead, including a Capitol Police officer. More than 480 people have been arrested on charges linked to the attack.

“January 6 was a day of darkness for our country,” Pelosi said, and the “terror and trauma” to members and staff who were there is something she cannot forgive.

She did not say who will lead or serve on the committee and said there is no fixed timeline for the committee, which will investigate and report on the facts and causes of the attack and make recommendations to prevent it from happening again.

Pelosi’s official announcement, two days after she signalled to colleagues that she would create the committee, means Democrats will lead what probably will be the most comprehensive look at the siege.

More than three dozen Republicans in the House and seven Republican senators said they wanted to avoid a partisan investigation and supported the legislation to form a commission, which would have been modeled after a similar panel that investigated the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, DC in 2001.

But those numbers were not strong enough to overcome GOP opposition in the Senate, where support from 10 Republicans is needed to pass most bills if all Democrats vote yes.

Pelosi says the select committee could be complementary to an independent panel, and that she is “hopeful there could be a commission at some point”.

Many Republicans have made clear that they want to move on from the January 6 attack, brushing aside the many unanswered questions about the insurrection, including how the government and law enforcement missed intelligence leading up to the rioting and the role of Trump before and during the attack.

Trump, who left office later in January, has repeatedly and falsely alleged that his electoral defeat in November was due to voter fraud, a claim dismissed by multiple courts, state election officials and his own administration’s review.

Some Republicans have gone so far as to play down the violence, with one suggesting the rioters looked like tourists and another insisting that a woman named Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed that day while trying to break into the House chamber through a window, was “executed”.

Last week, 21 Republicans voted against giving medals of honour to the US Capitol Police and the Metropolitan Police to thank them for their service on January 6. Dozens of those officers suffered injuries, including chemical burns, brain injuries and broken bones.

Seven people died during and after the rioting, including Babbitt, three other Trump supporters who died of medical emergencies and two police officers who died by suicide in the days that followed. A third officer, Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, collapsed and later died after engaging with the protesters, but a medical examiner determined he died of natural causes.

Source: News Agencies