WASHINGTON — One week after the nation marked the fifth anniversary of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack, the history of what happened that day is being reconsidered, revised and reassessed by the party in power.
The House GOP's new Select Committee on the Jan. 6 attack held its first hearing Wednesday, what was billed as an examination of the FBI's investigation into the pipe bombs that had been found outside the Democratic and Republican party headquarters during the day. The FBI's work dragged on for years until the arrest of a suspect last month.
But the House hearing quickly devolved into a revisionist spectacle --- militant Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes sat in the front row -- as Republicans pursued alternative theories about why President Donald Trump's supporters engaged in mob violence that day. They suggested the rioters were essentially tricked into laying siege to the Capitol, an attack watched around the world.
''There's been a lot of talk about conspiracy theories and narratives,'' acknowledged Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga., the chairman, as tensions flared during the two-hour hearing. He said his ''objective is to get to the truth.''
Truth and conspiracy theories collide
But the top Democrat on the panel, Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, warned he and others would not sit by silently as the Republican-led committee tried to rewrite history.
''The truth is a resilient thing,'' Raskin said. ''We're not going to put up with a pack of lies in this subcommittee and a bunch of conspiracy theories.''
What's clear is that five years on, the national trauma left behind by Jan. 6 still engulfs Congress, and the country, as Americans come to terms with what happened that day, when Trump's supporters stormed the Capitol after the defeated president told them to ''fight like hell'' as Congress certified the 2020 election results for Democrat Joe Biden.