Friend, Today marks two years since the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, led by far-right insurrectionists. The second anniversary of the deadly attack is an appropriate time to take stock of what we have learned, what progress we have made, and what we must do to protect against current and future threats to our democracy and our democratic institutions. The bipartisan House select committee investigating the insurrection, which issued its final report late last year, provided us with a road map for this important national reckoning. Over the 18 months of its tenure, the committee conducted 10 public hearings, interviewed over 1,000 witnesses, and reviewed more than 1 million pages of background information. This was the most important congressional investigation since the 9/11 Commission. Beyond the essential historical record, the true measure of the committee’s work will be whether the planners, perpetrators, funders and those who inspired the insurrection – including former President Donald Trump, his allies and other politicians who sought to forcibly uphold white supremacy and overturn the 2020 election – are held accountable, with serious consequences. The committee’s report and accompanying materials have provided a blueprint toward these objectives for Congress and the U.S. Department of Justice. The Southern Poverty Law Center commends the members of the committee, led by Chairman Bennie Thompson and Vice Chair Liz Cheney, for its groundbreaking contribution to efforts to expose and stop extremists from moving further into the mainstream. The committee’s investigation, final report and accompanying criminal referrals are essential steps toward transparency and accountability. What we have learned The violence on Jan. 6 was planned and was never meant to be the end goal. The committee report documented in great detail how Trump called for his supporters to come to Washington on that fateful day and then knowingly inspired an armed mob of his followers to go to the Capitol to prevent the peaceful transfer of power. As we have previously documented, far-right antigovernment extremists – and Trump himself – had laid the foundation for the violent insurrection in the years before. The lies of a stolen election and the extremist ideologies and conspiracy theories that fueled the attack were the culmination of a months-long, coordinated strategy by Trump and his allies to overturn the 2020 election and steal the presidency. The committee report also documented that Trump and his allies used racism as a principal driver in immediate post-election efforts to disenfranchise voters in major urban areas in Michigan, Georgia, Pennsylvania and other states. Over the next months, the false allegation of a stolen election led many state legislatures with Republican majorities (including in Deep South states where the SPLC operates) to enact discriminatory anti-voter laws and create new, racially gerrymandered congressional districts. These new districts disproportionately disenfranchise voters of color and are designed to undermine elections and control election outcomes in 2024 and beyond. We have also learned that white supremacy and hard-right extremism have been normalized and mainstreamed to a dangerous degree. White supremacist groups played a lead role in organizing, coordinating and executing the deadly Capitol attack and in other efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. SPLC Intelligence Project experts submitted testimony to the committee on how extremist groups and individuals – like the Oath Keepers, the Proud Boys and white nationalist Nick Fuentes – have infused once-marginalized, white supremacist ideas into mainstream Republican discourse and politics with the goal of maintaining a grip on power and silencing communities of color. The threat of political violence substantially increased in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack. According to a June 2022 poll jointly conducted by the SPLC and Tulchin Research, the mainstreaming of hate and antigovernment thought, and the willingness to engage in political violence, are now widely accepted on the right. For example, the poll found that 41% of Republicans agreed with the statement that “some violence might be necessary to protect the country from radical extremists.” Over half of Republicans also said they believed the country is headed toward a civil war. Progress made The committee report did not adequately address the failure of law enforcement and domestic intelligence agencies to recognize the scope of extremist threat from hate and antigovernment groups and prepare for the violence at the Capitol. But after the violence of Jan. 6, both federal law enforcement officials and the Department of Defense have substantially expanded their attention on domestic extremism and sharpened their focus on this threat. On his first full day in office, President Joe Biden ordered a comprehensive review of government efforts to address domestic terrorism. In June, the White House issued the first National Strategy for Confronting Domestic Terrorism, which stated that “the two most lethal elements of today’s domestic terrorism threat are (1) racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists who advocate for the superiority of the white race and (2) anti-government or anti-authority violent extremists, such as militia violent extremists.” Since that time, in periodic reports and congressional testimony, the Department of Justice, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security have consistently reiterated that assessment and have provided resources to address that threat. The FBI and the Justice Department, working in coordination with state and local law enforcement officials, have pursued attack planners and perpetrators with considerable urgency: Almost 1,000 people have been charged with crimes linked to the Jan. 6 insurrection; more than 460 people have pleaded guilty to charges connected to the riotous attacks. At the Pentagon, shocked by the fact that more than 90 current or former service members faced criminal charges for participating in the Capitol attack, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin issued a memorandum in February 2021, ordering a department-wide stand-down to educate Department of Defense personnel on the threat posed by supremacist and extremist activity. In March, the SPLC presented testimony at hearings on the issue before the House Armed Services Committee. In solidarity, Your friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center
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