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World News

A Capital Underneath Siege – The New York Instances

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An inauguration of the president in the United States is usually a celebration of democracy.

Hundreds of thousands of people come to Washington to see a newly elected president take the oath of office. An outgoing president signals his respect for the country by celebrating the new one, even if that outgoing president is disappointed with the election result – as was the case with Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George HW Bush and others.

“I grew up in the Washington area and initiations have always been a time of hope and new beginnings, regardless of party,” said Peter Baker, Times chief correspondent at the White House.

But when American democracy is under siege, inauguration can feel very different. That was the case in 1945 when the United States was fighting fascism in World War II and Franklin D. Roosevelt’s fourth inauguration was a spartan affair. It was true in 1861 when the country was on the brink of war and Abraham Lincoln was the target of an assassination attempt. Four years later, when the smallpox raged and the civil war neared its end, it was true again.

And it will be true today – when mismanagement took the US to the worst Covid-19 number in the world and when law enforcement agencies warn of potential violence by President Trump’s supporters.

The day will still be a triumph of democracy in most important respects: a defeated president’s attempt to overthrow a fair election has failed, as has a violent attack on Congress by his supporters. Election winner Joe Biden will be sworn in as president around noon Eastern, shortly after the new vice president, Kamala Harris.

Yet American democracy is under siege. Washington is like an armed camp with visitors banned from many locations, fences surrounding the National Mall, and troops lining the streets. Trump will not be attending the event and many of his supporters believe his false claims.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Peter, who has covered every White House since Clinton’s coverage and first covered an inauguration as a junior reporter in 1985, the start of Ronald Reagan’s second term. “It’s surreal to see our city becoming such an armed camp. It reminds me of Baghdad or Kabul when I covered these wars, but I never thought we would see it that way in Washington. “

This is how you see today’s inauguration. The reporting begins around 10 a.m. east.

In the following, we briefly look back at the three initiations that are most similar to today’s – from 1945, 1865 and 1861.

Following the election of Abraham Lincoln, several southern states split, and a newspaper described fears that “armed bands” would try to thwart his inauguration. A conspiracy to kill Lincoln forced him to sneak into Washington early that morning.

On inauguration day, cavalrymen flanked Lincoln’s procession, soldiers blocked roads, and rooftop snipers eyed the crowd. The first sentence on the cover of the New York Times the next day: “The day everyone looked at with so much fear and interest has come and gone. ABRAHAM LINCOLN has been inaugurated and ‘all is well’. “

Washington was a grim war city for Lincoln’s second inauguration after weathering recent waves of smallpox and heavy rainfall. The crowd that day was “almost knee-deep” in the mud. Lincoln rode in an open carriage with a military escort of black and white troops.

A Times report – by the poet Walt Whitman – noted that when the President spoke, “a strange little white cloud, the only one in this part of the sky, appeared like a hovering bird directly overhead”.

The actor John Wilkes Booth, soon to become Lincoln’s assassin, was in the crowd that day.

Safety concerns and austerity measures during the war made Franklin Roosevelt’s fourth inauguration “the easiest inauguration ever,” with “the smallest crowd ever,” wrote The Times.

The public parts of the event only lasted 15 minutes, also because Roosevelt was sick. He shivered as he stood on the south portico of the White House to give a brief address. Less than three months later, he would die of a brain haemorrhage. By the end of that summer, the US had won the wars in both Europe and Asia.

  • Mitch McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, blamed Trump for the Capitol uprising, saying the mob was “provoked by the President and other powerful people.”

  • Trump granted 143 pardons and commutations in his final terms, including Steve Bannon, his former chief strategist, and Elliott Broidy, one of his top fundraisers in 2016. For more notable pardons, see here.

  • During his four years in office, Trump used Twitter to praise, lobby, establish his version of events – and heighten his disdain. Here are all of his insults.

  • Americans look back: “Has there been a day in the past four years when Trump wasn’t somewhere in your orbit?” (This six-minute video shows unforgettable moments from his presidency.)

  • The Senate began confirmatory negotiations for five of Biden’s cabinet candidates. Due to delays, he is likely to be the first president in decades to take office without his national security team.

  • Kamala Harris will swear by three new Democratic Senators – Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff from Georgia and Alex Padilla from California – after becoming Vice President, which gives Democrats tight control over the Senate.

  • Biden is set to propose an immigration law today that will provide undocumented immigrants a route to citizenship and allow “dreamers” to apply for permanent residence.

  • The National Guard removed two troops from the inauguration service because of possible links to right-wing extremist movements.

  • These photos show Biden’s long journey to the presidency.

  • Can Biden take his peloton into the White House? Yes, say cybersecurity experts, but the bike may need adjustments.

A morning reading: In one of the great victories in Indian cricket history, a young squad without its big stars – and coping with injuries and racial abuse – defeated a confident Australia on its own turf.

From the opinion: Senate Democrats should get rid of the filibuster in order to make progress on climate change, civil rights and more, argues Adam Jentleson.

Lived life: As the only child of anthropologist Margaret Mead, Mary Catherine Bateson was once one of the most famous babies in America. She grew up to be a polymathic scholar and her 1989 book on the stop-and-start nature of women’s lives became a classic. Bateson died at the age of 81.

Some famous paintings are stolen more than once. For example, since 1988 thieves have stolen a painting by Frans Hals worth more than 10 million US dollars from a small Dutch museum three times, the last time in August.

Selling these images on the open market is impossible. Why do thieves want them? Having previously been stolen, the works have a track record showing that people are still willing to pay big bucks for them – either on the black market or through ransom.

Thieves sometimes sell stolen masterpieces to criminals who, in turn, could use them as leverage to reduce penalties for other crimes, reports The Art Newspaper. And in the case of the neck painting, an insurance company and the Dutch authorities once paid a ransom fee of more than USD 250,000. Recently, however, authorities and insurers have been reluctant to make payments because they believe they will encourage future thefts.

Learn about the fascinating history of the paintings that thieves keep stealing.

Chickpeas and noodles come together in this vegan main course.

Amanda Gorman, 22, the youngest inaugural poet, will read a work she completed after the Capitol uprising. She has discussed the writing process here.

The late night hosts reflected Trump’s last full day as president.

The pangram from yesterday’s Spelling Bee was refilled. Today’s puzzle is up – or you can play online if you have a game subscription.

Here’s today’s mini crossword and clue: Smile (five letters).

Thank you for spending part of your morning with The Times. Until tomorrow. – David

PS The Times website was launched 25 years ago this week. “With its entry on the web,” it says in an article, “the Times hopes to become a primary information provider in the computer age.”

Categories
Politics

Below Heavy Strain, Trump Releases Video Condemning Capitol Siege

The President also left open the option to apologize, despite Mr Cipollone’s concerns and warnings from outside advisers that he would ignite investigators who are already following him.

Mr. Trump has never been as isolated as he was this week. The White House is sparsely occupied, according to people who worked there on Wednesday. Those who went to work tried to avoid the Oval Office.

More and more employees have quit, and the White House law firm is not preparing to defend him in the Senate trial. His political adviser, Jason Miller, posted on Twitter a poll by John McLaughlin, one of the pollsters for the campaign, designed to demonstrate the president’s influence on the party, when the House Republicans debated their votes.

Plans to move Mr. Trump to another platform online after being banned from Twitter have been suspended. One option was the Gab platform, which attracted extremists and supporters of the QAnon conspiracy. Mr Trump’s advisor Johnny McEntee favored the site, but Mr Kushner blocked the move, according to people familiar with the discussions previously reported on by Bloomberg News.

Mr Giuliani is among those charged with involvement in inciting the mob that attacked the Capitol. A group of former US assistant attorneys who worked with him while serving as a federal attorney in Manhattan said Wednesday that he was dismayed by his previous appearance at the rally.

In a letter, the group said that Mr Giuliani’s comments calling on Trump supporters to engage “process through struggle” to stop the confirmation of election results contributed to the loss of life and damage to the country .

“It was disturbing and utterly disheartening to have any of our former colleagues involved in this behavior,” said former prosecutors in the letter, which was signed by many Giuliani colleagues, including Kenneth Feinberg, Ira Lee Sorkin, Elliot Sagor and Richard Ben -Veniste.

Categories
Business

11 Journalists on Overlaying the Capitol Siege: ‘This May Get Ugly’

Reporters knew before they arrived at the Capitol on Wednesday that there would be large protests in support of President Trump. But most expected the day’s main event to be the drama and ceremony of the nation’s leaders debating the ratification of the Electoral College vote for Joseph R. Biden Jr. as the next president.

The journalists ended up chronicling a siege that underscored the fragility of American democracy. Many did their jobs a few feet from drawn weapons. Others faced the wrath of pro-Trump agitators with a grudge against the news media.

We interviewed 11 journalists from a variety of outlets — including The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the British channel ITV and the Beltway news site Axios — who covered the events. The interviews have been edited and condensed.

Credit…Roy Cox

April Ryan, 53, White House correspondent, TheGrio: I woke up around 6 at home in the Baltimore area. My kids, 13 and 18, were in their room, doing Zoom. I was in the den and the office, working the phones, not really expecting anything big, thinking it was just going to be a lot of posturing.

Tia Mitchell, 41, Washington correspondent, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution: I had to get up early because we did our political newsletter, and then I had a podcast. I dropped off a gift for a friend’s birthday and headed into the capital.

Marcus DiPaola, 29, freelance journalist with 2.2 million TikTok followers: I knew it was going to be a complete mess ahead of time. I woke up at my friend’s apartment north of the White House, had some light cereal and checked the news.

Credit…Fox News Channel

Chad Pergram, 51, congressional correspondent, Fox News: My wife dropped me off on Independence Avenue, and right as I got out of the car, you could feel the tension, because there were protesters everywhere.

Kadia Goba, 46, congressional reporter, Axios: When I walked up the usual entranceway, Capitol Police told me I had to walk with the protesters. I was super pissed off about that. I walked through the crowd — and I’m a woman of color, so it was intimidating, to be honest with you.

Megan Pratz, 31, political director, Cheddar: It was very cold outside. After my noon live shot, my cameraman and I went inside the Capitol building.

Tia Mitchell, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: I had planned to spend my day in the House chamber because six of our eight House Republicans were planning to contest the electoral votes being tallied for Georgia. Walking from the Senate to the House, along the third floor, I peeked outside and could see the bigger protest.

Credit…Monica Weeks

Kadia Goba, Axios: My seat in the gallery was directly over Speaker Nancy Pelosi. I saw a picture online of the protesters in front of the building. At this point, all of the members are in debate mode, seemingly oblivious to what was going on.

J. Scott Applewhite, 69, senior photojournalist, The Associated Press: I was facing Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Mike Pence, and they brought in those beautiful antique mahogany wooden boxes carrying the ballots.

Credit…CNN

Donie O’Sullivan, 29, reporter, CNN: We got to the barrier at the base of the Capitol as they broke through. It was a dramatic moment, but also surprisingly undramatic in that, you know, there were obviously not sufficient numbers of police or barricades.

Robert Moore, 57, Washington correspondent, ITV News: We were standing to one side of the inauguration platform that Joe Biden will use on Jan. 20, and there was a small corridor that was unguarded by police. So they charged up there and, rather improbably, discovered there was a tiny side entrance, also apparently unguarded. They broke the window, forced open the door. And there they were, in the corridors of power, astonished themselves that they got that far.

Megan Pratz, Cheddar: We went down to the first floor, where the entrance and exit is. We tried to exit, but guards told us that the first floor was locked down.

Marcus DiPaola, freelance journalist: I get an alert that protesters had breached the Capitol, and I’m like, “OK, so that’s the kind of day it’s going to be.” I take my first video — like six cops against 600 protesters. One protester pulled his fist back, and the cop just puts his hands up and walks back. There just weren’t enough people. The protesters ran right through.

Tia Mitchell, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: House staff was saying to us one at a time in the press gallery that they were going to lock down the chamber because the protest was starting to get out of hand. But there wasn’t panic. The House was still debating Arizona.

Kadia Goba, Axios: Capitol Police came on the speaker to say there had been a breach. You go in this marble building, it seems sacred to the people that work there. You just don’t think of intruders gaining access to that portion of the building.

Credit…Reuters

Mike Theiler, 70, freelance photographer, Reuters: Police were up against the door, and people were trying to get in. I never imagined that the doors would be breached. Police said, “You’re going to have to leave.”

Tia Mitchell, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: I guess the adrenaline of being a news reporter started to kick in. My roots are in covering the night cop shift in Jacksonville, Fla. So I go into breaking-news mode. When they stopped proceedings on the floor, that’s when we knew it was escalating.

Marcus DiPaola, freelance journalist: This guy grabs me by the shoulder and he’s like, “Who do you work for?” I’m like, “I’m a freelance photographer.” He’s like, “Have you ever worked for CNN?” And then he pulled me out of the way and he charges in. Obviously, I’m not going in there. I’m not going to fight my way past a bunch of cops. At 2:21 a Confederate battle flag makes it to the top of the stairs. At 2:23 I first noticed that windows were smashed on the door.

Mike Theiler, Reuters: All my professionalism from 50 years of photography kind of takes over. I started shooting, knowing deep down that you can’t make a bad picture in a situation like that. There were maybe 20 of the rioters in the hallway and only a handful of police trying to restrain them. That’s when I saw that the guy with a Confederate flag had kind of moved off by himself. I’m thinking in the context of — we’re in this hallowed hallway, with the gilded framed paintings on the wall, the bust, the kind of thing that speaks to anyone who has ever been to the Capitol, and I kind of isolated him with that in the background.

The Presidential Transition

Updated 

Jan. 8, 2021, 10:32 p.m. ET

Tia Mitchell, Atlanta-Journal Constitution: Capitol Police told us the protesters were in the rotunda. And then they said to put on the gas masks. We’re trying to figure out how to open the darn things, and maybe that was a sign that we were nervous.

Kadia Goba, Axios: There was an announcement that tear gas had been dispensed. I turned around and gallery staff were handing out gas masks. The protesters were knocking on the door — boom, boom — echoing throughout the chamber. The bangs were getting louder and louder, and then you hear glass.

April Ryan, TheGrio: I said to myself: “Go back to Reporting 101. Call your sources. Reach out to people who are inside.” And they talked. I never thought about driving in. Who’s to say that someone wouldn’t recognize me and try to follow me? Donald Trump does not like April Ryan. It’s a dangerous mix. Donald Trump has called us the enemy of the people, which is not true. I’ve understood that I can’t go cover a campaign rally for Donald Trump — it’s not safe. So I’ve learned how to maneuver around those things and still do my job and break stories.

Tia Mitchell, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: At 2:45, we heard a very loud bang coming from the direction of the speaker’s lobby. At that point I called my mom. I didn’t know if we were going to be sheltered indefinitely. I wasn’t thinking the worst, but my mom is not on social media, and I was worried my phone might die.

Kadia Goba, Axios: I’m behind a chair and my editor calls. I start giving her details. They get us out of the gallery.

Credit…Jacquelyn Martin/Associated Press

J. Scott Applewhite, A.P.: Next thing you hear, someone is starting to break the glass of the door. I have a telephoto lens, and I’m focused on that door. It’s maybe 50 feet away. So at 2:39 p.m., there were several plainclothes police gathered around the inside of the door of the chamber. It just has a lock on it. A couple of the officers bring a heavy piece of furniture and set it on top of another piece of furniture, and now the windows of the door are barricaded up about halfway.

At 2:40 p.m., they started to break the glass. At 2:40 p.m., plainclothes officers about 10 feet from the door have now started to take out their guns. The officers are telling them to get back. The standoff continues, and I can start to see a man’s face. The officers are talking to him through the broken glass. They kept telling him, “You can walk away from this, you don’t want to do this.” By 2:54 p.m. the mob has retreated. At this point I started taking pictures of all the empty seats in the chamber with the scattering of debris.

Kadia Goba, Axios: There’s a trail of us going downstairs. They’re directing members to a secure location. Sadly, photographers and reporters were not allowed, and we end up going to Representative Ruben Gallego’s office. I was trying to get my blood pressure and my heart rate down.

Robert Moore, ITV: Once we were in Congress itself with the group that we followed in, we simply filmed and spoke to them as they, I think it’s fair to say, rampaged. There were people who asked which organization we were with. We explained calmly that we were a British TV network and we were there to record a moment in history.

There were a few flashes of anger. But I’ve covered wars and disasters around the world for nearly 30 years, and I never felt in danger personally. I actually watched them, with my own eyes, tear down Nancy Pelosi’s nameplate off the wall above the door that enters her office. That was a moment that I thought, “Gosh, this could get ugly and violent.”

Zoeann Murphy, 39, video journalist, The Washington Post: We arrived on the north of the Capitol around 4. I had been assessing what gear to bring with me. I have body armor and a helmet and a gas mask and a first aid kit — and it became clear that all of those things should be coming with me.

Megan Pratz, Cheddar: We stood in the designated press area on the east side of the Capitol, in the area we call the House Elm. Throughout all of this, people were stopping to criticize the media, calling us fake news and liars, the stuff I’m kind of used to. But after people started leaving the Capitol, it really ramped up. They were calling us communist; they told me that they were coming for me. Then there were 20 to 30 people who started coming into the area, surrounding each journalist and screaming at us, these hateful, hateful things. You couldn’t see a Capitol Police officer anywhere. That was when we decided we were no longer safe. We grabbed pretty much everything, and we just walked out. We were shaking, like physically shaking, because it’s an adrenaline rush, and not a great one.

Zoeann Murphy, Washington Post: One of the Trump supporters who’s been participating in the screaming at police pulls out her cellphone and says: “Oh, my God, guys, listen up. The president tweeted. He says we’re a country of law and order, and, um, I think we should go.” She read the tweet out loud maybe 15 times. It was so clear that, even if the president wasn’t intentionally giving direction, people were receiving it as direction. And then that area dispersed quite a bit.

Credit…iTV News

Robert Moore, ITV: I left the building with a group, and they were happy to have achieved their objective. The mood was a little bit euphoric.

Donie O’Sullivan, CNN: I asked folks were they proud of what they had done. And they said they were very proud and viewed themselves as the patriots, and that the people who accepted the legitimate results of the election were the traitors, which was quite surreal.

Kadia Goba, Axios: They let us go back to the Capitol, and we went back to our seats in the House gallery. Coming back was a little surreal. The House gallery had snacks. We had cup-size macaroni and cheese. Pringles. I remember a big bag of Cheetos.

Credit…Samantha Tadelman for Cheddar

Megan Pratz, Cheddar: I got home around 7:30. I gave my two little kids — they’re 5 and 3 — hugs and tried not to freak them out. I ate dinner but wasn’t really hungry. I didn’t want to do anything, just sit.

Zoeann Murphy, Washington Post: Law enforcement started kettling, creating circles of police officers around people. I’ve been in those many times, and usually I say I’m a journalist and they let me out. They didn’t in this situation, and I was taken aback. I went to three different officers and said we were journalists. When they didn’t engage at all, I thought we might be in a dangerous situation. One officer says very loudly to the crowd, “You are under arrest.” I’m getting my boss on the phone, reaching to get my credentials out, and one officer grabs me by the shoulder and the arm, and grabs my colleague by the shoulder and the arm, and starts to walk us toward these buses. By that point, I knew we were not in danger, though I was concerned we might have to be on these buses with a bunch of people who were not wearing masks. When it was our turn to be searched, this female officer came running up with a look of panic and asked if we were journalists. Her superior came and looked at our credentials and released us.

Marcus DiPaola, freelance journalist: Around 8, the police start kettling the media, and I was like, “Time to go.” I got back to the apartment and had pretzels and a lot of cookies and a pint of mango sorbet and a pint of NatureSweet Cherubs grape tomatoes. I turned on the TV and realized the historical implications of what I had just witnessed. My first thought was: “How in the world do we fix this? These people have been duped — people just aren’t taught to process information and assess its credibility.” And I remember feeling a complete hopelessness.

Tia Mitchell, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: They let us back into the gallery, and at 8:10 the Senate got back to work. Right off the bat, Kelly Loeffler made a speech where she said she would no longer object to Georgia’s electoral vote being counted for Biden. So I had to write that up.

Megan Pratz, Cheddar: I probably went to bed around 10. I woke up several times throughout the night. The only thing I kept saying to my husband was “It’s hard to be hated this much.”

Credit…Sarah Voisin/The Washington Post

Zoeann Murphy, Washington Post: At around 10, I went back to my hotel, walking through these mobs of Trump supporters drunk in the lobby. I get back to my room, and that’s when I started to process the enormity of what had happened.

Tia Mitchell, Atlanta Journal-Constitution: I left the Capitol at 12:46 and was waiting for the Senate subway and ran into Senator Loeffler, but she didn’t want to be interviewed. Sarah Wire from The Los Angeles Times agreed to share her ride-share, which was touching. I got home around 2 a.m. I made myself a drink and a little bit of food and watched “House Hunters” — HGTV is soothing for me. I went to bed around 3 a.m. I don’t feel like I’ve reflected on what happened. I think I’m scared of that. I might get too emotional.

Robert Moore, ITV: I went to sleep around 3 or 4 a.m. and was up a couple of hours later. What has surprised me is the level of interest in Europe, and in Britain in particular, with the events here. This is seen as a seminal story, one that shatters the myth about the stability of American democracy.

Kadia Goba, Axios: I was there till nearly 4 a.m., when Pence gaveled out. I went straight home. My friend was up and happy to hear from me, so we talked for 49 minutes. I still had adrenaline pumping.

J. Scott Applewhite, A.P.: I returned with my gear to my office in the Dirksen Senate Office Building. I had some soup, and I had an avocado and some nice tomatoes. I keep a little foldout chair, so I spread that out and slept between 5 a.m. and 7:30 a.m.

Megan Pratz, Cheddar: As I got out of bed, my body felt like it had whiplash. I had a sore throat — the air had been very smoky. I had a splitting migraine. I went downstairs, and the first thing I said to my husband was: “I’ve got to go to work, but I’m not OK today. And when I come home, all I want is for you to hold me really tight.” I feel both very fortunate and devastated that I’ve had to witness this part of history.