A couple of weeks ago, Republican Sen. J.D. Vance was talking to reporters about the state of his party when he added a provocative claim. “I think that no real Republican with any credibility in the party is still blaming [Donald Trump] for Jan. 6,” the Ohio senator said.
Yesterday, Republican Rep. Dan Meuser of Pennsylvania appeared on CNN and conceded that Jan. 6 was “a very, very ugly day” that “certainly should be denounced.” But the GOP congressman added moments later, “[T]he idea of trying to pin [Jan. 6] on President Trump’s words, I think falls way, way short.”
The same afternoon, Republican Rep. Michael Waltz of Florida also appeared on CNN and pushed a similar line. “I don’t think he was responsible for Jan. 6,” the congressman said.
"I don't think he was responsible for January 6" — @michaelgwaltz on the guy who incited January 6 https://t.co/Ek5H1jbOmh
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) June 26, 2024
To be sure, three-and-a-half years after the insurrectionist riot, Republican rhetoric on the subject is all over the map. Some in the party argue that Jan. 6 was justified because of a ridiculous election conspiracy they’ve concocted. Other GOP voices insist that the assault on the Capitol was some kind of plot hatched by antifa and/or the FBI.
But Republicans such as Meuser and Waltz are members of a very different contingent: They expect Americans to believe that Trump wasn’t responsible for the attack that he instigated. The former president, the argument goes, didn’t do what he obviously did.
Sure, the public might’ve seen Trump summon a mob, fill them with lies, and deploy them to Capitol Hill with instructions to “fight like hell.” Nevertheless, that’s not stopping GOP lawmakers such as Vance, Waltz and Meuser from going along with the gaslighting, effectively telling voters that they shouldn’t believe their lying eyes.
There was a time in which the Republican Party’s line looked and sounded quite different. In February 2021, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell gave a speech excoriating the former president for a “disgraceful dereliction of duty” and said he holds him responsible for “provoking” the Jan. 6 siege of the Capitol.








