Republicans used to denounce the violent insurrectionists of January 6. Their rhetoric is no longer operative.
Congressman worries that Trump's pardon of 1,500 people who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 creates risk for more bloodshed ...
President Biden said the pardons are not an "acknowledgment that any individual engaged in any wrongdoing" but rather protect individuals from "unjustified and politically motivated prosectutions." ...
Threats against members of Congress skyrocketed in 2024, marking a return to levels not seen since the year after the Jan. 6 ...
A 2022 law required a plaque to be placed on the west front of the Capitol complex to honor Jan. 6 heroes. It hasn't been installed.
Mark Milley and members of Congress who investigated the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. The pardons came hours before President-elect Donald Trump — who has called for some of his political foes to be ...
Within hours of taking the oath on January 20, Trump pardoned 1,500 people either convicted or or facing charges related to ...
On his first day in office, President Donald Trump granted sweeping clemency to all of the nearly 1,600 people charged in the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol. Learn more about their cases ...
Chip Roy called for those who received broad immunity from potential prosecution, including the former members of the January 6 select committee, to be hauled before Congress. “Implication is ...
Like Bennet, other Colorado lawmakers warned the Jan. 6 pardons send a bad message. “President Trump’s decision to pardon his loyalists, including members of violent white nationalist militias ...
Mark Milley, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the members of Congress and staff who served on the Jan. 6 committee and the U.S. Capitol and Washington, D.C., police officers who testified before that committee.