U.S. House votes to launch new Jan. 6 insurrection investigation - Action News
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U.S. House votes to launch new Jan. 6 insurrection investigation

Split along party lines, the U.S. House of Representatives launched a new investigation of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection on Wednesday.

Only 2 Republicans join Democrats in approving special committee to probe attack

Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi is seen at a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Wednesday. Split along party lines, the U.S. House of Representatives launched a new investigation of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection on Wednesday. (J. Scott Applewhite/The Associated Press)

Split along party lines, the U.S. House of Representatives launched a new investigation of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection on Wednesday, approving a special committee to probe the violent attack as police officers who were injured fighting former president Donald Trump's supporters watched from the gallery above.

The vote to form the panel was 222-190, with Republicans objecting that majority Democrats would be in charge. The action came after Senate Republicans blocked creation of an independent commissionthat would have been evenly split between the two parties.

Emphasizing the importance that Democrats attached to the vote, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told lawmakers in the chamber: "We will be judged by future generations as to how we value our democracy."

Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, who lost her position in Republican leadership because of her criticism of Trump, was one of only two Republicans to vote for the panel. She declared, "Our nation, and the families of the brave law enforcement officers who were injured defending us or died following the attack, deserve answers."

But Ohio Republican Brad Wenstrup rejected the new probe as "incomplete and insufficient" because it would not look into other incidents including the 2017 shooting at a baseball field that badly injured Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana.

WATCH |U.S. security officials point fingers for Capitol Hill riots:

U.S. security officials point fingers for Capitol Hill riots

4 years ago
Duration 1:53
U.S. security officials blamed each other for allowing the Capitol Hill riots to unfold on Jan. 6. Senate hearings started Tuesday to figure out how the insurrection happened.

Pelosi said she preferred that an independent panel lead the inquiry but Congress could wait no longer to begin a deeper look at the insurrection that was the worst attack on the Capitol in more than 200 years.

Tensions have worsened in Congress since Trump's supporters laid siege, aiming to stop Congress' certification of Trump's loss to Democrat Joe Biden. A brief sense of shared outrage has given way to partisan politics and attempts among some Republicans to downplay the events of the day. Most Republicans have made clear they want to move on from the insurrection and Trump's role though many of them had fled the violent mob themselves.

Democrats expressed frustration with those Republicans who have complained that the investigation would be partisan after their party blocked the bipartisan panel.

"I think for some on the other side, nothing that gets to the truth will ever be good enough, because they do not want the truth," said Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, who led the debate ahead of the vote.

The panel would be led by Democrats, with Pelosi appointing a chairperson and at least eight of the committee's 13 members. The resolution gives her a possible say in the appointment of the other five members as well, directing that they will be named "after consultation" with House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, centre, leaves the House floor after the Wednesday vote. (Alex Brandon/The Associated Press)

Republican leaders have declined to say whether Republicans will even participate. In a memo to all House Republicans late Tuesday, No. 2 House Republican Scalise urged his members to vote against the resolution, saying the committee "is likely to pursue a partisan agenda."

The GOP role in the probe, and the appointments to the panel, could help determine whether the committee becomes a bipartisan effort or a tool of further division. Two Senate committees issued a bipartisan report with security recommendations earlier this month, but it did not examine the origins of the siege, leaving many unanswered questions about the events of the day.

Republicans face police ire

McCarthy is facing pressure to take the investigation seriously from police officers who responded to the attack, several of whom sat in the gallery and watched the debate. Dozens of officers suffered injuries that day as Trump's supporters pushed past them and broke into the building to interrupt the certification President Biden's victory.

The spectators included Metropolitan Police Officers Michael Fanone and Daniel Hodges and Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn.

Fanone has described being dragged down the Capitol steps by rioters who shocked him with a stun gun and beat him. Hodges was crushed between two doors. And Dunn has said that rioters yelled racial slurs and fought him in what resembled hand to hand combat as he held them back.

Michael Fanone, left, a Washington Metropolitan Police Department officer who was attacked and beaten during the Jan. 6, attack on the Capitol, and Harry Dunn, a U.S. Capitol Police officer who faced the rioters, leave a meeting with McCarthy at the Capitol on Friday. (J. Scott Applewhite)

Also in the gallery were Gladys Sicknick and Sandra Garza, the mother and partner of Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who collapsed and later died after engaging with the protesters.

He was sprayed with chemical irritants, but a medical examiner determined he died of natural causes.

Fanone and Dunn met with McCarthy on Friday. Fanone said he asked McCarthy for a commitment not to put "the wrong people" on the panel, a reference to those in the GOP who have played down the violence and defended the insurrectionists. He said McCarthy told him he would take his request seriously.