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In January 2011, the Chicago Tribune published a Q&A with Illinois' five freshmen in the U.S. House. Among them was Republican Adam Kinzinger, who had run for Congress after three tours in Iraq. When the quintet were asked, "Whom do you admire from the other side of the aisle?" four of them offered names. Kinzinger did not. Instead, he gave an answer that, in retrospect, feels as if it were written by Sophocles: "Those who are committed to serving their country."
This week the House Select Committee to Investigate the Jan. 6 Attack on the United States Capitol published its final report and referred President Donald Trump for prosecution. It also referred John Eastman, who devised the legal framework for the attempted coup, to the Justice Department. After more than a thousand interviews, a million documents and countless hours, this chapter of the book of Trumpism is finally closed.
For the seven Democrats on the committee, the journey has been long, but at least they can finally go home.
But for the two Republican members, who chose country over party, "home" is now a complicated word.
This is particularly true for Kinzinger, who announced in 2021 that he was not seeking re-election after his district was redrawn — although it is worth mentioning that had he run again, he would have faced the wrath of Donald Trump for voting to impeach him. During the Jan. 6 investigation, Kinzinger sold his house in his home state of Illinois and temporarily moved his family to Texas. He's now trying to decide where "home" is — both literally and figuratively.
"There are a lot of factors for us to consider," Kinzinger told me this week, besides housing costs and schools. "I don't know where we're going to settle down. We'll see."