It wasn’t long after January’s deadly insurrectionist attack on the U.S. Capitol when an obvious idea took hold: policymakers needed an independent commission, along the lines of the 9/11 Commission, to determine what happened and why.
As we’ve discussed, in theory, this seemed like a no-brainer. Eleven weeks after the assault, there’s no shortage of questions in need of answers — questions unresolved by last month’s impeachment trial — and an independent panel could both fill in the gaps and make policy recommendations to prevent related violence in the future. National polling showed fairly strong support for the idea.
With this in mind, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) recently presented a blueprint — what was described as a “discussion draft” — for a special panel. A month ago yesterday, Republican leaders denounced it.
This week, Pelosi told reporters that some GOP officials have been privately “receptive” to the idea of a commission, but reaching a bipartisan agreement has been impossible, at least so far. NBC News recently reported that the momentum behind the idea “has dissipated,” and lawmakers are “growing increasingly pessimistic that an agreement on establishing such a commission can be reached.”
If that was Plan A for getting answers about the Jan. 6 riot, Politico reported overnight on Plan B.








