The most important question looming over the House investigation into the Jan. 6 attack is how to punish former President Donald Trump and deter future coup-plotters.
And it’s not an easy one.
You can tell by the reports of behind-the-scenes Jan. 6 committee debates over whether to submit a criminal referral to the Justice Department. And by the DOJ’s request for transcripts of all the committee’s interviews for use in criminal investigations. And by the understandably obsessive public debate over whether Trump will ever don an orange jumpsuit.
Trust me, everyone: I share that obsession. But as I mentioned earlier this week, we shouldn’t limit repercussions for coup-plotters to criminal charges. There are several tools at the country’s disposal to beat back anti-democratic efforts like Jan. 6 in the future. And we should explore each one.
Now is the time for true innovation if we want to avoid this scenario again. We don’t have an explicit, anti-coup handbook. We’re all authors, writing our future in real time.
That begs the question of what accountability for insurrectionists looks like for high-level officials like Trump and his inner circle. Is it a measure barring them from holding future office? Civil lawsuits? Criminal charges? All three?
As I see it, those are three avenues to accountability being explored.
There’s the criminal lane, which could obviously lead to jail time — but also punitive measures like fines.









