During the “season finale” of the Jan. 6 House committee’s public hearings last week, Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Va, co-led a presentation that showcased former President Donald Trump’s inaction during the attack on the Capitol. It reinforced a well-established point: Former President Trump struggles to stick to a script and can’t seem to resist ad-libbing. But it’s in those unscripted moments that he is often the most honest about his schemes and motives. When Trump finally relented and recorded a video message telling the mob attacking the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 to disperse, every word of praise he uttered for the insurrectionists, including “We love you,” was made up on the spot and was inconsistent with the prepared text he’d been given.
On Monday Luria released to Twitter a video that shows fragments of text Trump removed from statement he posted the next day. At last week’s hearing, the committee showed outtakes from Trump recording his remarks on Jan. 7, 2021. Now we can see a draft of that statement, complete with marked-up text in what appears to be black Sharpie, Trump’s writing implement of choice. (Ivanka Trump confirms in her testimony that the handwriting on the text looks to be her father’s.)
It took more than 24 hours for President Trump to address the nation again after his Rose Garden video on January 6th in which he affectionately told his followers to go home in peace.
— Rep. Elaine Luria (@RepElaineLuria) July 25, 2022
There were more things he was unwilling to say. pic.twitter.com/cJBIX5ROxs
He cut most of a paragraph about the consequences for the perpetrators of the attack, including: “I am directing the Department of Justice to ensure all lawbreakers are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. We must send a clear message — not with mercy but with JUSTICE. Legal consequences must be swift and firm.”
Even more damning is what he cut from the next paragraph, which addressed “those who engaged in acts of violence and destruction.” He cut: “I want to be very clear: you do not represent me. You do not represent our movement.” He also tweaked the next line — “And if you broke the law, you belong in jail” — to say instead that lawbreakers “will pay.”
He knew whose side they were on all along — and that he might need to call on them again in the future.
Those deletions say volumes about his frame of mind and feelings about the violence from the previous day. The people who broke through the doors and windows of the Capitol, battered Capitol police officers, and hunted for then-Vice President Mike Pence did represent Trump. He knew they did and didn’t want to speak out against them or expel them from his movement. He knew whose side they were on all along — and that he might need to call on them again in the future.









