WASHINGTON — Inside the Capitol, reminders of the violence are increasingly hard to find.
Scars on the walls have been repaired. Windows and doors broken by the rioters have been replaced. And there is no plaque, display or remembrance of any kind.
Lawmakers rarely mention the attack, and many Republicans try to downplay it, echoing President-elect Donald Trump's claims that the carnage of that day is overblown and that the rioters are victims.
In some ways, it's like the insurrection of Jan. 6, 2021, that shook the foundations of American democracy, never happened.
''It's been erased,'' said Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt. ''Winners write history and Trump won. And his version is that it was a peaceful gathering. Obviously completely untrue.''
If Trump pardons rioters, as he has said he will do after taking office Jan. 20, that would be ''putting an exclamation point on his version of what happened,'' Welch said.
Some of the 1,250 defendants convicted of crimes after Jan. 6 called for the deaths of then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Mike Pence, who was Trump's vice president, as the mob violently overran police and breached the building. Some carried weapons, zip ties, chemical irritants, Confederate flags as they ransacked the Capitol and hunted for lawmakers. They sought to stop the certification of Democrat Joe Biden's win over Trump, echoing the Republican incumbent's false claims that the election was stolen.
But the disruption was only temporary. Congress resumed work that evening and completed its constitutional role.