Trump supporters storm US Capitol, lawmakers evacuated
Angry supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the
U.S. Capitol on Wednesday in a chaotic protest aimed at thwarting a peaceful
transfer of power, forcing lawmakers to be rushed from the building and
interrupting challenges to Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory.
Trump issued a restrained call for peace well after
the melee was underway but did not urge supporters to disperse. Earlier he had
egged them on to march to Capitol Hill. The Pentagon said about 1,100 District
of Columbia National Guard members were being mobilized to help support law
enforcement at the Capitol.
Wednesday’s ordinarily mundane procedure of Congress
certifying a new president was always going to be extraordinary, with
Republican supporters of Trump vowing to protest results of an election that
they have baselessly insisted was reversed by fraud. But even the unusual
deliberations, which included the Republican vice president and Senate majority
leader defying Trump’s demands, were quickly overtaken.
In a raucous, out-of-control scene, protesters fought
past police and breached the building, shouting and waving Trump and American
flags as they marched through the halls. One person was reported shot at the
Capitol, according to a person familiar with the situation. That person’s
condition was unknown.
The protesters abruptly interrupted the congressional
proceedings in an eerie scene that featured official warnings directing people
to duck under their seats for cover and put on gas masks after tear gas was
used in the Capitol Rotunda.
With the crowds showing no signs of abating, Trump
tweeted, “Please support our Capitol Police and Law Enforcement. They are truly
on the side of our Country. Stay peaceful!” Earlier, at his rally, he had urged
supporters to march to the Capitol.
Senators were being evacuated. Some House lawmakers
tweeted they were sheltering in place in their offices.
Demonstrators fought with Capitol Police and then
forced their way into the building, not long after a huge rally near the White
House during which Trump egged them on to march to Capitol Hill.
Lawmakers had convened for an extraordinary joint
session to confirm the Electoral College results.
Though fellow Republicans were behind the challenge to
Biden’s 306-232 Electoral College victory, Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell sought to lower tensions and argued against it. He warned the country
“cannot keep drifting apart into two separate tribes” with “separate facts.”
McConnell declared, “The voters, the courts and the
states all have spoken.”
But other Republicans, including House GOP leaders
among Trump’s allies were acting out the pleas of supporters at his huge
Wednesday rally up Pennsylvania Avenue outside the White House to “fight for
Trump.”
“We have to fix this,” said Rep. Steve Scalise of
Louisiana, the GOP whip.
The last-gasp effort is all but certain to fail,
defeated by bipartisan majorities in Congress prepared to accept the November
results. Biden i s to be inaugurated Jan. 20.



