Jan. 6 hearings schedule

2022 - 6 - 13

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The Jan. 6 committee has postponed its Wednesday hearing and ... (NPR)

The select committee has announced without explanation that the hearing scheduled for June 15 has been postponed. The next hearing will take place June 16.

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Jan. 6 Panel Delays Wednesday Hearing to Give Staff Time to Prepare (The New York Times)

The session had been scheduled to focus on President Donald J. Trump's effort to use the Justice Department to overturn the 2020 election.

The session had been scheduled to focus on President Donald J. Trump’s effort to use the Justice Department to overturn the 2020 election. The panel is still scheduled to hold a hearing on Thursday focusing on Mr. Trump’s pressure campaign against Vice President Mike Pence to try to persuade him to throw out Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory. WASHINGTON — The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol has postponed a hearing that was scheduled for Wednesday to lay out its findings about President Donald J. Trump’s attempt to use the Justice Department to overturn the 2020 election, the panel said on Tuesday.

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Jan. 6 committee abruptly postpones Wednesday hearing (NBC News)

The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol announced in a statement Tuesday that it was postponing its public hearing that was.

Lofgren on Tuesday reiterated comments made a day earlier by Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., that the committee would not make any criminal referrals. "Our investigation is ongoing and we will continue to gather all relevant information as we present facts, offer recommendations and, if warranted, make criminal referrals." Wednesday's hearing had been expected to focus on then-President Donald Trump's unsuccessful plan to replace Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen with Justice Department lawyer Jeffrey Clark, who was more supportive of Trump’s fraud claims. The next hearing will take place on Thursday instead. The three other hearings set for June have not been scheduled yet. WASHINGTON — The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol announced in a statement Tuesday that it was postponing its public hearing that was scheduled for 10 a.m. ET Wednesday.

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Jan. 6 panel postpones scheduled Wednesday hearing (Spectrum News NY1)

The House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol has postponed its next hearing, scheduled for Wednesday, June 15, the panel ...

The hearing also made the case that the former president and his allies used those false voter claims to raise millions of dollars ahead of the Capitol attack. The campaign sometimes sent as many as 25 emails per day, she said. Trump abandoned the idea when multiple Justice Department and White House lawyers told him that they would resign if that happened. "The 'Big Lie' was also a big rip-off." An investigator working for the House committee said in a video presentation played Monday that the Trump campaign sent “millions” of fundraising emails to supporters related to false claims about the election and raised hundreds of millions of dollars by urging people to donate to a nonexistent “election defense fund.” So we're trying to – you know, we were going to have one, two three in one week, and it's just too much to put it all together."

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Jan. 6 House Committee Postpones Scheduled Wednesday Hearing (Bloomberg)

The House Committee investigating the Jan. 6 assault on the US Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters has postponed the hearing scheduled for Wednesday to ...

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U.S. congressional panel probing Jan. 6 Capitol attack postpones ... (Reuters)

The House of Representatives committee investigating the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, attack on U.S. Capitol said on Tuesday it has postponed a hearing scheduled ...

Committee spokespeople did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

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Trump's ex-campaign manager won't testify at Jan. 6 hearing as ... (USA TODAY)

The chairman of the committee, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said Monday's hearing would show how former President Donald Trump lost the 2020 election, knew he ...

U.S. Capitol Police Officer Caroline Edwards was the “first law enforcement officer injured by rioters storming the Capitol grounds on January 6, 2021,” according to the committee. The committee sought Stepien’s testimony about converting the election campaign to focus on “Stop the Steal” messaging and related fundraising, according to other witnesses. Audience members' moods abruptly shifted when a video chronicling the events of Jan. 6, 2021, played, many shifting in their seats and visibly on edge. But not all Trump loyalists – or family – went along with Trump's plans, the committee said. The first panel of witnesses Monday features Bill Stepien, Trump's former campaign manager, and Chris Stirewalt, a former Fox News political editor. Former President Donald Trump criticized Schmidt days after the election for his stance, calling him a RINO — Republican in name only — who was “being used big time by the Fake News Media to explain how honest things were with respect to the Election in Philadelphia.” Trump urged Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger during a Jan. 2 call to “find” 11,780 votes he needed to beat Joe Biden in the state. "Due to a family emergency, Mr. William Stepien is unable to testify before the Select Committee this morning. “He lied to his supporters and the country.” Stirewalt was let go after the controversial election call and Bill Sammon, managing editor of Fox’s Washington bureau, retired. White House counsel Pat Cipollone called the proposal “ridiculous” because Pak was already leaving, according to Donoghue. - 🎤Who is expected to testify?: Chris Stirewalt, a former Fox News political editor who helped call President Joe Biden’s win in Arizona,said Friday he will be testifying.

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Jan. 6 hearing live updates: Trump 2020 campaign manager pulls ... (The Washington Post)

Former Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, citing a family emergency, canceled planned in-person testimony Monday before the House select committee ...

Why would members do that if they felt that their involvement in this plot to overturn the election was somehow appropriate?” Stepien is appearing under subpoena, so it’s an open question as to how forthcoming he will be as a witness. “We have direct testimony, some of which we’ll hear today, that people had conversations directly with the former president to tell him that he did not win,” Luria, a committee member, said in a CNN interview. This hearing will focus on the origins and evolution of President Donald Trump’s “big lie” and the way he knowingly spread that message to activate and galvanize his supporters to help him stay in power. “As he confronts losing, Trump has devoted his campaign and the Republican Party to this myth of voter fraud. The party had sued the committee over a subpoena issued to Salesforce, the San Francisco-based vendor that holds sensitive financial and other data of the RNC. Trump lost the state to Joe Biden and criticized Schmidt publicly for not supporting him. Stepien was expected to appear under subpoena, so it was an open question as to how forthcoming he would be as a witness. Al Schmidt is a former city commissioner of Philadelphia who will testify Monday during the Jan. 6 committee hearings. He just huddled with committee lawyers in the hallway outside the hearing room as we all wait for the now-delayed hearing to start. Committee members view the hearings as an opportunity to offer a reality check to Americans about how completely norm-breaking Trump’s actions were. In the second in a series of June hearings, panel members said they will also explore how Trump’s “big lie” drove Republican fundraising appeals after Joe Biden won the election.

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What to expect from the second Jan. 6 committee hearing (NPR)

Two panels of witnesses will testify Monday, although the headliner witness, former Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, will no longer appear "due to a ...

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Jan. 6 Hearings: Watch Live (The New York Times)

Trump's campaign chief, Bill Stepien, canceled his testimony at the last minute and sent his lawyer instead.

And it was she who pressed to assemble a bipartisan team of former intelligence analysts and law enforcement specialists on the committee’s staff. She has been unrepentant in continuing to blame Mr. Trump for stoking the attack, and her Republican colleagues for following his lead by spreading the lie of a stolen presidential election. “Those who invaded our Capitol and battled law enforcement for hours were motivated by what President Trump had told them: that the election was stolen, and that he was the rightful president,” Ms. Cheney said. “We want to show how that positioning occurred, so that the public understands that some of those things in a democracy should never happen.” In an email, Jay Ostrich, a spokesman for Mr. Perry, who has declined to testify before the committee, called the assertion “a ludicrous and soulless lie.” It showed how Mr. Trump and his loyalists had used a calculated campaign of lies to bind his followers and build support for his attempt to stay in power, through extralegal means and violence. Officer Goodman is expected to testify about how some members of the mob that the Seefrieds had joined yelled at him after breaching the building and aggressively asked, “Where are the senators?” and “Where are the votes being counted?” With a handful of production staff, it is his job to sift through and edit down a voluminous amount of images from police body cams, hallway surveillance video and raw footage from a documentarian — hours and hours of recordings that captured the insurrection as it unfolded. One of the witnesses slated to testify on Monday is a former Fox News politics editor, Chris Stirewalt, who was fired by the network a year and a half ago. Since his ouster, Mr. Stirewalt has become an outspoken critic of his former employer and what he has described as an information bubble that is doing a disservice to Trump supporters. Mr. Stepien was present for key conversations about what the data showed about Mr. Trump’s chances of succeeding in an effort to win swing states, beginning on election night. The House committee played a video of Mr. Stepien saying he didn’t think the campaign could declare victory on election night because “it was far too early to be making any calls like that.”

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How to watch Monday's January 6 committee hearing - CNNPolitics (CNN)

The House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol will hold its second public hearing of the month on Monday.

The hearing will be aired live on CNN and a livestream will be featured on CNN.com without requiring a login. and had "accepted" his statement that there wasn't sufficient voter fraud to overturn the 2020 election. publicly against his daughter's testimony, writing on his social media platform, Truth Social: "Ivanka Trump was not involved in looking at, or studying, Election results.

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Jan. 6 hearings: Day 2 live updates and analysis (MSNBC)

The House Jan. 6 select committee's second public hearing on its investigation into the Capitol riot begins Monday. President Donald Trump and the "big lie" ...

"Trump has become a prisoner of his own ego," the board wrote. Today, the committee is expected to focus on one aspect of Trump’s possible criminal culpability, likely by highlighting that he was told there was no fraud in the election and therefore knew he was spreading misinformation. Stirewalt’s former network didn’t even cover the first night of hearings, and now that network, its operations and the pressure exerted on it by Team Trump will take center stage during today’s hearing. He's the first person running for elected office in a major state or federal race to be charged in connection with the Jan. 6 riot. Of course, the committee is on a fact-finding mission to inform its legislative function — and not in a position to enforce criminal laws. As I expected, the committee is ready to use video clips from Stepien's deposition in lieu of his live testimony. We’ll be shown more videos from the hundreds of hours of depositions that the committee has taken, demonstrating that Trump’s team knew he lost. However, its members know the Justice Department is watching and previously have used language that seems to track the elements of certain federal crimes, such as conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding. And that’s despite a right-wing disinformation campaign to downplay and spread disinformation about the hearing. If Fox News and other right-wing media weren’t bent on further polarizing the country around Jan. 6, the numbers for the hearings likely would have been higher. The first hearing of the Jan. 6 committee last week garnered some big numbers — at least 20 million viewers. Nonetheless, it’s the kind of colorful detail that helps underscore how Trump’s inner circle was an utter mess and contemptuous of propriety on election night.

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January 6 Hearings Live: Federal court found "no evidence" of ... (Newsweek)

The second day of the January 6 hearings is Monday with testimony about Donald Trump's unproven claims of election fraud. Follow Newsweek for the latest.

An attorney for Stepien is expected to appear in his place and make a statement on his behalf, the committee said. I was asked to testify and I got to go," he said. The Committee will not hear from Stepien due to a family emergency. The committee played a clip of Trump speaking on election night, claiming there was fraud and that he won the election. The hearing was broadcast on most major television channels. The House Jan. 6 Committee is expected to begin its second day of hearings shortly. The select committee began holding public hearings on Thursday with a prime-time event that many of the major networks covered live. Stepien suggested Trump should tell the American people that votes were still being counted and the race was still too early to call. He added that the percentage of votes that came in by mail doubled from 2016 to 2020. Miller told Trump he could not declare victory based on the numbers they had on election night. "He needed three of these states to change," Stirewalt said. This is why Republicans tend to "go ahead" in the vote count first, Stirewalt said.

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January 6 hearings live updates: Committee focuses on Trump's ... (NBC News)

The House committee delved into how then-President Donald Trump laid the groundwork for the deadly attack with his false claims of fraud. Tap to Unmute.

"What was generally discussed on that topic was whether the fraud, maladministration, abuse or irregularities, if aggregated and read most favorably to the campaign, would that be outcome determinative," Morgan said in a video clip from his committee interview. “There was sound advice that he didn’t have the numbers to win,” the committee aide said. Cheney also added that the public should pay attention to what Trump and his legal team repeatedly said about Dominion voting machines "far-flung conspiracies with a deceased Venezuelan Communist allegedly pulling the strings," she said. "As early as April 2020, Mr. Trump claimed that the only way he could lose an election would be as a result of fraud." He said that none of the arguments about fraud would actually change the election's outcome. He was upstairs, we were kind of on the first floor, so not the upstairs mostly with Ivanka and her brothers and a couple other people who would come in and out." "The only way we’re going to lose this election is if the election is rigged. Miller said they shouldn't do that until there was a "better sense of the numbers." The committee then aired a clip of Trump suggesting on election night that he didn't want more ballots counted because he knew they wouldn't favor him. He said that when he gave Trump a direct answer about one of the allegations, he'd move onto the next one. Barr said Trump told him the report showed "absolute proof the Dominion machines were rigged," a favorite post-election claim of voter fraud Trump spread. - The committee laid out thevolume of Trump adviserswho were telling him that he had lost the election.

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Jan. 6 committee to detail the origins and reach of Trump's election lies (Politico)

Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a rally. The select committee says it intends to show that many of the people who joined ...

On Thursday, the panel aired clips of former Attorney General Bill Barr telling the committee he told Trump his fraud claims were “bullshit.” And the panel played snippets of testimony from Trump campaign aides Jason Miller and Alex Cannon telling the panel they had told Trump the numbers were not lining up in his favor. The select committee intends for Monday to be a document-driven and fact-heavy hearing, packed with evidence that showcased the proliferation of Trump’s lies about the election results. The select committee has already unfurled some of its evidence that Trump knew his claims of election fraud were baseless. Former acting attorney general Jeffrey Rosen, former acting deputy attorney general Richard Donoghue and former Office of Legal Counsel chief Steve Engel are among those expected to testify. Trump replied that he was confident the lawsuits his campaign had engaged in would reverse the results, according to Miller’s testimony. Though even many allies had urged him to embrace mail-in voting, Trump resisted and immediately made it the centerpiece of his effort to cast doubt on the results of the election. Fox drew Trump’s outrage after the network became the first to call Arizona for Biden, a projection that ultimately held true. In the meantime, Trump turned to allies to promote his increasingly outlandish claims of fraud, even as court after court rejected them. On Wednesday, the select committee plans to take testimony from senior leaders in Trump’s Justice Department who similarly helped run down Trump’s fraud claims and discovered them to be baseless. Stepien was expected to appear under subpoena, but the committee announced Monday morning he would be missing the hearing due to a “family emergency.” His lawyer Kevin Marino is expected to make a statement in his place. Stirewalt has attributed his ouster to his decision to defend that election call, while the network has said it was part of a digital restructuring. Eventually, they became the fuel for the pro-Trump mob the battered its way into the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

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Jan. 6 panel postpones Wednesday's hearing to give more time for ... (Axios)

"We're trying to give them a little room to do their technical work," Rep. Zoe Lofgren said.

The House Jan. 6 committee made its clearest attempt yet at Monday's hearing to establish potential criminal liability by people in former President Trump's inner circle. Who's testifying at the second Jan. 6 committee hearing - With Wednesday's hearing postponed, the next public hearing is scheduled for Thursday, the Jan. 6 committee said. State of play: Wednesday's hearing was intended to focus on the Department of Justice and former President Trump's efforts to use the department to challenge the results of the 2020 election. The Jan. 6 committee public hearing originally scheduled for Wednesday has been postponed to give the panel's video team more time to compile exhibits, Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) told MSNBC on Tuesday. Jan. 6 panel postpones Wednesday's hearing to give more time for "technical work"

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January 6 committee postpones Wednesday hearing - CNNPolitics (CNN)

The House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, riot at the US Capitol has postponed its hearing scheduled for Wednesday.

"We're focused on the hearings in front of us, telling the full, complete story, as the vice chair laid out in her opening statement last week," Aguilar said. "We're going to move forward and have a Thursday hearing and then get ready for hearings next week as well," Aguilar said. Monday's hearing, the second of a series, prominently featured lengthy portions of former Attorney General William Barr's deposition with the committee

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Jan. 6 committee postpones hearing scheduled for Wednesday (CBS News)

Rep. Zoe Lofgren said the delay was meant to give staffers more time to prepare the committee's extensive video presentations.

Lawmakers showed never-before-seen footage of interviews with top officials in the Trump administration and campaign who said the former president continued to baselessly allege the election was stolen, despite their best efforts to convince him otherwise. The committee will meet on Thursday for a hearing that was already on the committee's calendar. The committee instead played video clips of Stepien's closed-door interviews with committee investigators. Cheney said the committee will feature testimony from Pence's chief of staff and general counsel about Trump's pressure campaign. Lofgren indicated the agenda and witness list for that meeting will remain the same. So we're trying to give them a little room to get their work done," Lofgren said on Capitol Hill.

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