BY LISA MASCARO, ZEKE
MILLER AND MARY CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) —
President Joe Biden forcefully blamed Donald Trump and his supporters Thursday
for holding a “dagger at the throat of democracy” with election lies that
sparked last year’s deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol, using the anniversary
of the attack to warn that America’s system of government remains under urgent
threat.
The president set the
tone on a day of remembrance that brought fiery speeches, moments of silence
and anguished accounts from lawmakers recalling the terrifying hours of Jan. 6,
2021, when the Trump mob laid siege to the Capitol and rioters tried to stop
the routine, ceremonial certification of election results.
Notably, almost no
Republicans joined Biden and the Democrats in what some hoped would be a day of
reconciliation. Instead, it was a fresh and jarring display of a nation still
deeply torn by the lies that led to the riot, by its unsettled aftermath and
Trump’s persisting grip on a large swath of the country.
“For the first time in
our history, a president not just lost an election, he tried to prevent the
peaceful transfer of power as a violent mob breached the Capitol,” Biden said.
“You can’t love your country only when you win.”
Biden’s criticism of the
defeated president was rife with condemnation for the assault that has
fundamentally changed Congress and the nation, and has raised global concerns
about the future of American democracy.
His voice booming at
times, reverberating in the ornate Statuary Hall where rioters had laid siege,
the president called on Americans to remember what they saw Jan. 6 with their
own eyes: the mob attacking police and breaking windows, a Confederate flag
inside the Capitol, gallows erected outside amid calls to hang the vice
president — all while Trump sat at the White House watching on TV.
“The former president’s
supporters are trying to rewrite history,” Biden said, incredulous. They want
you to see Election Day as the day of insurrection and the riot that took place
here on January 6 as a true expression of the will of the people. Can you think
of a more twisted way to look at this country, to look at America? I cannot.”
Until the anniversary,
Biden had mentioned the attack only sparingly but he aggressively weighed in
Thursday and coupled his message with a call for voting rights legislation that
Democrats have long been urging.
The president’s remarks
drew a stark contrast with the false narratives that persist about the Capitol
assault, including the continued refusal by many Republicans to affirm that
Biden won the 2020 election. Five people died in the Capitol siege and its
immediate aftermath.
“We must be absolutely
clear about what is true and what is a lie,” Biden said. “The former president
of the United States of America has spread a web of lies about the 2020
election.”
Yet even as the president
spoke, the vanquished Trump gave no signs of letting go, a show of the division
in the country emphasized by the silence and absence of most Republicans to
join Biden at the Capitol.
From Florida, Trump
revived his unfounded attack on the elections. He accepted no responsibility
for sending the thousands of supporters to the Capitol that day when he told
them to “fight like hell.” By Thursday evening, he was sending out a
fundraising appeal.
Even among congressional
Republicans who condemned the attack in the days afterward, few spoke that way
now — some joining in Trump’s false portrayals.
“What brazen
politicization of January 6 by President Biden,” tweeted Sen. Lindsey Graham of
South Carolina, a sometimes Trump confidant who had initially said he had
abandoned Trump after the riot only to quickly embrace him again.
Senate Republican leader
Mitch McConnell — who at the time said Trump was “practically and morally”
responsible the attack — issued a statement that highlighted the gravity of
that day, but also said some Democrats were trying to exploit it for other
purposes. He was absent, with a contingent attending the funeral of former colleague
Sen. Johnny Isakson in Georgia.
Rep. Liz Cheney, vice
chair of the House committee investigating the attack and one of the few GOP
lawmakers attending the Capitol ceremonies, warned that “the threat continues.”
Trump, she said, “continues to make the same claims that he knows caused
violence on January 6.”
“Unfortunately, too many
in my own party are embracing the former president, are looking the other way
or minimizing the danger,” she told NBC’s “Today” show. “That’s how democracies
die. We simply cannot let that happen.”
She was joined by her
father Dick Cheney, the former vice president and now a Republican Party elder.
They were the only members of the GOP seen for a moment of silence on the House
floor.
Dick Cheney was greeted
by several Democrats and said in a statement: “I am deeply disappointed at the
failure of many members of my party to recognize the grave nature of the
January 6 attacks and the ongoing threat to our nation.”
Throughout Thursday,
lawmakers shared their experiences of being trapped in the House or rushed away
from the Senate, as the siege raged for hours. Rep. Dan Kildee of Michigan
showed a shard of glass from one of the Capitol’s broken windows he carries in
his pocket.
“January 6 is not over,”
he said, choking up. “The threat, and the lie that fuels that threat, continues
to rear its head.” He said: To truly protect our democracy we need truth.”
The House panel
investigating the insurrection plans to spend the coming months exploring and
revealing what happened with public hearings.
Biden and his
administration have come under criticism from some in his party for not
adequately explaining how they believe democracy is at risk, or pushing
Congress hard enough to pass election and voting rights legislation that is
stalled by a Republican filibuster in the Senate.
Barack Obama, the former
president, said “nothing is more important” on the anniversary than ensuring
the right to vote.
“Our democracy is at
greater risk today than it was back then,” Obama said in a statement.
Biden’s address, and that
of Vice President Kamala Harris who is leading the administration’s efforts on
the voting and elections legislation, appeared as a direct response to critics.
“We must pass voting
rights bills,” Harris said in her address. “We cannot sit on the sidelines.”
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, drew on history with a hope that Americans would turn to their “better
angels” to resolve differences. Lawmakers held an evening vigil on the Capitol
steps.
Other remembrances — or
demonstrations — were few around the country.
Biden’s sharp message and
the Republicans’ distance from it come as lawmakers are adjusting to the new
normal on Capitol Hill — the growing tensions that many worry will result in
more violence or, someday, a legitimate election actually being overturned.
A new poll from The
Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research showed that 3 in 10
Republicans say the attack was not violent. Around two-thirds of Americans
described the day as very or extremely violent, including about 9 in 10
Democrats.
The percentage of
Americans who blame Trump for the riot has grown slightly over the past year,
with 57% saying he bears significant responsibility, up from 50% in the days
after the attack.
Trump’s claims of
widespread election fraud were rejected by the courts and refuted by his own
Justice Department.
An investigation by the
AP found fewer than 475 cases of voter fraud among 25.5 million ballots cast in
the six battleground states disputed by Trump, a minuscule number in percentage
terms.
___
Associated Press writers
Darlene Superville, Kevin Freking, Jill Colvin Alexandra Jaffe and Farnoush
Amiri contributed to this report.