When it comes to understanding House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s perspective on Donald Trump and the Jan. 6 attack, consider a brief timeline from early last year.
On Jan. 6, during the attack on the Capitol, McCarthy and Trump reportedly had a tense conversation in which the minority leader pressed the then-president to tell the rioters to stand down. According to a different GOP lawmaker, Trump said, “Well, Kevin, I guess these people are more upset about the election than you are.”
On Jan. 10, McCarthy privately told his House Republican colleagues that he was prepared to tell Trump he should resign the presidency.
On Jan. 11, McCarthy said he’d spoken to Trump, and the then-president had told him that he accepted some responsibility for the insurrectionist violence.
On Jan. 13, McCarthy said on the House floor that Trump “bears responsibility“ for the attack.
If we were to simply stop here, this timeline would seem to offer a complete, week-long story in which McCarthy had taken a series of morally defensible stands.
The problem, of course, is that we can’t stop here.
The former president was reportedly infuriated by the Californian’s Jan. 13 remarks, because Trump expected his ostensible allies to show absolute, genuflecting fealty at all times. And with this in mind, on Jan. 21, just eight days after his pre-written remarks on the House floor, McCarthy started hedging. Referring to Trump and the violence, the Californian told reporters, “I don’t believe he provoked [the riot] if you listen to what he said at the rally.”
A few days later, the minority leader added that instead of holding the former president responsible, it’d be fairer to say “everybody across this country has some responsibility.”
A few days after that, McCarthy traveled to Mar-a-Lago to effectively kiss the ring, and an even more ridiculous pattern soon followed.









