Former President Donald Trump’s staunchest Republican loyalists in the House have spent months downplaying the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. But we now also know many of them were scared of the Trump-supporting mob and desperately appealed to the president for help.
I’d say many of them are still scared. They’re scared that betraying their once and future king will draw the eyes of the mob back on them. They’re scared of what will happen to their jobs and power if that happens. And that fear has blinded them to the actual danger their inaction and silence are enabling.
They’re scared that betraying their once and future king will draw the eyes of the mob back on them. They’re scared of what will happen to their jobs and power if that happens.
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, reluctantly confirmed to Fox News in late July that he’d spoken with Trump on Jan. 6 but declined to give details. He followed up two days later with a stumbling interview in which Spectrum News asked him whether he’d spoken with Trump “before, during, or after” the Capitol attack.
“Uh, I’d have to go, I’d, I, I, I spoke with him that day after, I think after. I don’t know if I spoke with him in the morning or not,” Jordan responded, according to a transcript from Talking Points Memo’s Josh Marshall.
Sunday, we learned not only that Jordan spoke with Trump multiple times on Jan. 6, but also that at least one call took place while the mob was in the middle of its attack. Jordan told Politico Playbook’s Olivia Beavers that he was “sure” he was in the safe room where members of Congress were shepherded after the police lines broke during a call with the president.
A source also told Politico that Jordan placed at least one call imploring “Trump to tell his supporters to stand down” while alongside Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., another of Trump’s arch-loyalists. Jordan wouldn’t confirm specifics of his call(s) but “said that like everyone, he wanted the National Guard to get involved.”
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., was busy trying to do the same on Jan. 6. When McCarthy phoned for help against the rioters, he was clear that it was Trump supporters who were attacking. The then-president responded, “Well, Kevin, I guess these people are more upset about the election than you are,” according to Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, R-Wash.
So when the pro-Trump horde was literally beating down their doors, McCarthy, Jordan and Gaetz all asked Trump for help and protection — which he never sent. The message from Trump was likely to have been received loud and clear: If my people come for you, I won’t stop them.
With that warning ringing in their heads, these same Republican have gone all in on placating the plebeians who still provide the tyrant with his base of power.








