House Republicans’ Investigation Report: ‘January 6 Was Pelosi’s Fault’

House Republicans have released a report on their investigations into the riot on January 6, 2021, that determines the breach of the U.S. Capitol building was Democrat Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s fault.

The 141-page investigative report was independently published on Wednesday by Reps. Jim Banks (R-IN), Rodney Davis (R-IL), Troy Nehls (R-TX), Jim Jordan (R-OH), and Kelly Armstrong (R-ND).

It outlines the failures of House Democratic Party leadership and Capitol authorities that left the complex vulnerable.

Text messages and emails from Pelosi’s office reveal her staff held regular meetings discussing security detail.

They also helped edit authorities’ plans and turned down several requests from federal law enforcement to protect the United States Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Such failures include Pelosi and Democrat leadership being closely involved in security decisions.

The report notes that Democrat leaders excluded Republican lawmakers from key meetings and conversations related to House security.

It further notes that Democratic Party leadership showed widespread concern about “optics” over the early deployment of the U.S. National Guard to protect the Capitol grounds.

“Democrats and the Jan. 6 Committee used the Capitol Police as a political prop, then did nothing when USCP officers were harassed for telling the truth,” Banks told The Federalist.

“They should be ashamed.”

Banks reportedly said that the document helps counter the Democrats’ anti-Trump narrative.

The Democrats’ version of events fails to acknowledge security shortcomings by police and political leadership.

“Our report exposes the partisanship, incompetence, and indifference that led to the disaster on January 6, and it the leading role Speaker Pelosi and her office played in the security failure at the Capitol,” he said, according to Just the News.

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“Unlike the sham January 6th Committee, House Republicans produced a useful report that will keep our Capitol and USCP officers safe with no subpoena power and no budget.”

Politifact reported that the rioting on January 6 involved approximately 2,000 people.

Some of them overturned barricades, clashed with police, and entered the Capitol.

Officials estimate about 800 people out of the massive crowd breached the Capitol grounds and building, leaving just over 200 people pleading guilty to one or more charges.

The report described “criminal rioters assaulted police officers, broke into the U.S. Capitol, damaged property, and temporarily interfered with the certification of states’ presidential and vice presidential electors at the Joint Session of Congress—a typically pro forma event.”

Former Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund, who resigned after the riot, told The Washington Post that the House speaker’s authorities turned down requests for preemptive deployment of the National Guard six times before January 6.

Sund also reportedly testified that then-House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving said “optics” was the reason for not sending in the National Guard.

On February 9, 2022, Pelosi reportedly said she has “no power over the Capitol Police.”

“This is false,” the report reads.

“Documents provided by the House Sergeant at Arms show how [Irving] carried out his duties in clear deference to the Speaker, her staff, and other Democratic staff.

“The Speaker’s statement created uncertainty and confusion with respect to the historical reporting structure for the [House Sergeant at Arms] and [United States Capitol Police].”

The Federalist writes that the sergeant at arms reports to the speaker, a system which has carried on in the aftermath of the riot with magnetometers installed outside the lower chamber and fence around the complex at Pelosi’s direction.

Lawmakers reported that Irving routinely met with Democrat staff without Republicans ahead of Jan. 6.

“The [House sergeant at arms] had a pattern of and practice of seeking and obtaining permission from the Speaker for all security decisions,” the report reads.

Following the riot, Republican lawmakers wrote that staff within the House Sergeant at Arms office emailed Irving saying that Jan. 6 was Pelosi’s fault.

Pelosi forced Irving to resign following the Capitol riot.

The report notes that officers on the front lines and analysts in Capitol authorities’ intelligence division were undermined by the misplaced priorities of their leadership.

“Those problems were exacerbated by the House Sergeant at Arms, who was distracted from giving full attention to the threat environment prior to January 6, 2021, by several other upcoming events,” the report reads.

U.S. Capitol Police reportedly obtained ample information from several channels to “anticipate and prepare for the violence.”

Read the full report here.

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By Frank Bergman

Frank Bergman is a political/economic journalist living on the east coast. Aside from news reporting, Bergman also conducts interviews with researchers and material experts and investigates influential individuals and organizations in the sociopolitical world.

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