WASHINGTON – Minnesota's congressional delegation is deeply split over the insurrection one year after a mob of Donald Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol.
Democratic members see Jan. 6 as an attack on democracy. But in a stark contrast to a year ago when they denounced the violence, their Republican counterparts unanimously declined to discuss the deadly siege.
"There are some in our delegation that wish to ensure that that day is commemorated and recognized in a solemn and meaningful way," Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips said. "There are some in our delegation that would like to see it forgotten and dismissed and removed from our collective memory."
All four GOP members in Minnesota's delegation refused multiple requests to comment on the anniversary of the siege. Yet a year ago, they decried the attack. Rep. Tom Emmer, who also leads the House Republican's campaign arm, said in a statement that night that "today's events in Washington were an unacceptable display of violence that runs counter to everything we stand for as a country." GOP Rep. Michelle Fischbach had tweeted earlier, "the violence that we're seeing, especially toward law enforcement, is unacceptable."
But in the hours afterwards, Fischbach and fellow Republican Rep. Jim Hagedorn voted against certifying the presidential election in two swing states won by Democrat Joe Biden, breaking from Emmer and GOP colleague Pete Stauber, who joined Democrats in opposing those attempts. Neither Fischbach nor Hagedorn responded to a question about whether they regret their votes against certification.
Thursday marks one year since the insurrection that resulted in roughly $1.5 million in damage, according to the Justice Department. Some 140 law enforcement officers were injured in the attacks that involved everything from the use of chemical irritants to flag poles and fence pieces wielded as spears.
When the violence was described as an attack by a reporter, the chairman of Minnesota's Republican Party pushed back.
"I certainly would call it a disturbance of some kind, but I have not been spending a lot of time thinking about it, and I don't know anybody else who has other than Democrats and I guess the media," David Hann said.