On Wednesday, a legion of far-right marchers plans to descend on the nation’s capital. This isn’t their first foray into Washington — in November and December, prior sorties saw white nationalists, Proud Boys, militia members and hard-core Trumpists stab bystanders, burn Black Lives Matter banners and sound ram’s horns in support of the increasingly dim hope that Donald Trump will retain the presidency. But Jan. 6 is no incidental date; it’s the day Congress counts the Electoral College’s votes in the 2020 presidential election — a usually ceremonial endeavor that this year aligns with the overwhelming popular will of U.S. voters, who supported President-elect Joe Biden by a margin of 7 million votes.
2021 already promises more of what 2020 delivered: a shattering of the fragile ceremonies of democracy, exposing the abyssal, violent white power populism roiling below. Wednesday morning will herald a dual defense against any repudiation of Trumpism’s corrosion — one in the halls of Congress, the other in the streets, where a chaotic mass of conflicting Trumpist rallies are being planned. The challenge 140 Republican members of the House and 12 GOP senators plan to mount against the results of a legitimate election is bolstering the mood — and the conspiracy-laden cause — of the far-right marchers.
The day’s proceedings in the hushed, carpeted halls of the legislature, taking the form of a chorus of “nays,” will yield to bear Mace and knives after dark in the open air of the capital after the Trumpist rallies officially end. The parallel events represent a fundamental shift in the order of operations of the U.S. political sphere. And no matter how much a scandal-fatigued populace might wish to pretend otherwise, the era of Trumpism will not end on Jan. 20.
2021 already promises more of what 2020 delivered: a shattering of the fragile ceremonies of democracy, exposing the abyssal, violent white power populism roiling below.
The “how did we get here” element of the Jan. 6 march and its congressional parallel is long and winding, filled with perfervid conspiracy theories, stochastic incitement to violence and a creeping undermining of the democratic process. Trump’s phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger over the weekend, in which the president explicitly instructed Raffensperger to doctor vote totals to overturn the presidential election result in the state, is just the latest manifestation of an open war against a presidential transition that most elite pundits view, in blasé fashion, as inevitable.
That war has taken place in the courts — in a sea of spurious lawsuits, including many that baffled and aggrieved even Trump-appointed judges — and in the streets, as state capitals around the country have faced ragged, maskless crowds chanting to “Stop the Steal.” It’s also been accompanied by an efflorescence of online misinformation and conspiracy that has capitalized on the insular infosphere that right-wing media has created, rife with rumors of sedition and treason, which continues to feed the flames of the dying Trumpist enterprise — or perhaps to create, out of falsehood and dark intimations, an incipient Lost Cause to rally around for years to come.
There’s little rhyme or reason to the vast majority of the conspiracies spawned since Election Day. They’ve claimed that dead people have voted in great numbers, as in a nightmarish Gogol play. That dead people voted twice or three times. That living people did the same. Thousands of Americans are now convinced that voting machines and software created by the companies Dominion and Smartmatic were hijacked by Venezuelans, led by the ghost of Hugo Chávez, to change vote totals in favor of Joe Biden. (Newsmax and OANN, two rabidly pro-Trump, right-of-Fox News television channels, were forced to issue corrections under threat of an unusually robust defamation lawsuit after they aired countless conspiracy theories about the two companies.)
The apotheosis of this conspiracy-frenzy is perhaps best embodied in Trump’s lawyer L. Lin Wood, an erstwhile member of the “Elite Strike Force” legal team that thrust scads of lawsuits in the wake of the election. Over the past week, Wood — who has long been a public sympathizer with the QAnon movement —– has moved into full-throated embrace of the theory’s wildest tenets. In a string of astonishing tweets, Wood posited that the actor Isaac Kappy, a QAnon acolyte who died by suicide in 2019, had held the key to a global conspiracy in which prominent figures, including Chief Justice John Roberts, were being blackmailed in a scheme involving child rape and murder, coordinated by a worldwide intelligence service cabal known as the Lizard Squad. Earlier that week, Wood — who has met with the president repeatedly — tweeted that Vice President Mike Pence and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell should be executed for treason for not overturning the election results.
This tweet was an insurance policy. The evil forces behind this blackmail scheme of child rape & murder need to know that others have encryption key. I have procedure in place if I die in near term or any member of my family is harmed or threatened, key will be released by many. https://t.co/g2TzKMawdh








