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In the aftermath of the January 6 United States Capitol attack, after drawing widespread condemnation from the U.S. Congress, members of his administration, and the media, 45th U.S. President Donald Trump released a video-taped statement on January 7, reportedly to stop the resignations of his staff and the threats of impeachment or removal from office.
45-year-old hairstylist from New York City, founder of the WalkAway campaign, arrested in Omaha, Nebraska by the FBI. [166] The FBI was sent multiple screenshots from his Twitter account, which both endorsed the attack and described his involvement with it, including a video in which he encouraged other rioters to take a shield from a police ...
The New York Times observed that by "not carrying the hearings live in prime time" Fox News was able to avoid a potentially "awkward on-screen moment." [367] During the weeks following the 2020 election, Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity promoted Trump's election fraud narrative.
In the opening public hearings of the Jan. 6 select committee investigating the riot at the U.S. Capitol, the most damning evidence that former President Donald Trump conspired to overturn a ...
Cheney, who lost reelection to a Trump-backed challenger in 2022 for her role as vice chair of the January 6 committee and voting to impeach Trump for inciting the Capitol riot, fiercely defended ...
Signs reading Stop the Steal and Off with their heads, photographed on the day of the attack. In 2019, Kara Swisher, a columnist for The New York Times, envisioned what would happen "if Mr. Trump loses the 2020 election and tweets inaccurately the next day that there had been widespread fraud and, moreover, that people should rise up in armed insurrection to keep him in office". [4]
For years, Donald Trump has threatened to go after countless political rivals who he claims have wronged him. In speeches to supporters and rants on his Truth Social platform, he has on multiple ...
The New York Times stated that Trump's comments "risked radicalizing his most die-hard supporters even further, encouraging them to repeat events like those that unfolded on Jan. 6." University of Chicago professor Robert Pape stated that Trump's comments on the attack "normalizes violence as a legitimate solution to political grievances." [15]