Nobody planned it this way, but the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, former president Donald Trumpâ€
That no one planned it is apparent from the coincidence of events that put the focus back on the issue. How long it remains at the center of the political dialogue — and whether it will influence many voters in the final month of the campaign — are questions yet to be answered. But the issue is what makes 2024 different from other presidential elections and also why so many voters see the stakes as so consequential.
The Jan. 6 attack, and Trumpâ€
The two candidates spoke past one another as they talked about it. But then Walz, the governor of Minnesota, asked a direct question of Vance, a senator from Ohio, and Vance muffed it badly. “Did he lose the 2020 election?â€� Walz asked Vance, referring to Trump. “Tim, Iâ€
In a debate that was otherwise largely free of fireworks and generally cordial, that exchange went viral. Public reaction to the debate said it was essentially a draw. Pundit assessment as the days went on called Vance the winner and said Walz had stumbled at key moments. But it was the Jan. 6 moment that had legs, and the Harris campaign seized on it and turned it into an ad.
An explosive filing by special counsel Jack Smith, which a federal judge ordered be unsealed on Wednesday, served to amplify the issue. In the 165-page filing in the case charging Trump with conspiring to subvert the 2020 election, Smith and his team laid out damning new information about Trumpâ€
Among the details that grabbed the most attention was the allegation that when he was told that then-Vice President Mike Pence, who was in the Capitol at the time, was being rushed to a secure location as rioters outside were chanting “Hang Mike Pence,� Trump said “So what?�
The filing includes several references in which Trump dismissed the conclusion of his advisers that claims of a stolen election were inaccurate, that the evidence of such would not hold up in the courts. “It doesnâ€
Trumpâ€
Smithâ€
Itâ€
Vice President Kamala Harris has not made the protection of democracy a principal focus of her candidacy. In her speech at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, she called Trump an unserious person whose reelection would have serious consequences and recounted what he had done to overturn the 2020 election. But her main messages have been to introduce herself to voters who donâ€
Harrisâ€
But on Thursday, Harrisâ€
Few have been more vociferous in arguing that Trump should never be allowed back in the White House than Cheney. She sacrificed her political career in the Republican Party to sound the alarm. Both she and her father, former vice president Dick Cheney, two staunch conservatives, crossed party lines to endorse Harris. Thursdayâ€
“Donald Trump was willing to sacrifice our Capitol, to allow law enforcement officers to be beaten and brutalized in his name, and to violate the law and the Constitution in order to seize power for himself,â€� Cheney said. “I donâ€
That is the question for now, whether voters are numb to what happened on Jan. 6 and to what Trump did and continues to do to deny that Biden was legitimately elected. The issue of democracy ranks high on the list of votersâ€
Most minds are made up on this issue, which is why all of Trumpâ€
But this is a unique election and has been ever since Trump refused to accept that he lost in 2020 and falsely claimed that the vote was rigged, encouraged the mob that attacked the Capitol and then set out to reclaim the presidency on the foundation of a lie. Trump has yet to say that he will accept the results if he loses in November, and the prospect of challenges to results this year by Trump and his allies, should Harris win, are real. The happenstance of events of the last week brought back into focus one reason this election matters more than most.