The House Jan. 6 committee hearing on Tuesday focused on the way then-President Donald Trump and his campaign terrorized election officials who refused to go along with his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
We heard from a bipartisan group of high-level politicians who testified about what they experienced as targets of Trump’s election lies. But the stars — and I use that term regretfully — of Tuesday’s hearings were Wandrea “Shaye” Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman — two Black election workers from Georgia falsely accused of election fraud by Trump.
The mob succeeded in its fundamental goal of scaring Black people out of participating in the electoral process.
The two recounted death threats and hateful messages they received after Trump lost in Georgia and spread false claims they engaged in a criminal scheme against him. What the women described were effectively modern-day lynch mobs, inspired by Trump and Rudy Giuliani’s racist lies, that tried to disempower Black voters and the officials who certified their choices.
These lynch mobs didn’t succeed in overturning the 2020 election. But their efforts to intimidate worked. Freeman testified the FBI advised her to leave her home for months after Jan. 6 out of concern for her safety. And Moss testified about learning of a pro-Trump mob showing up outside her grandmother’s home claiming they were prepared to conduct a “citizen’s arrest.”
It’s tempting to hear their testimony and remark of their obvious bravery in giving it. But that misses the point here. Freeman and Moss both made clear that the mob succeeded in its fundamental goal of scaring Black people out of participating in the electoral process. And with that: Trump and Giuliani revived the lynch mob as a political tactic.
In this clip, Moss describes the effects of being targeted by Trump’s campaign:
In emotional testimony, former GA election worker Wandrea ArShaye "Shaye" Moss recalls the moment she found out about the threats to both her and her mother following attacks from Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani. pic.twitter.com/1ldHHXQE4L
— The Katie Phang Show (@katiephangshow) June 21, 2022
In this clip, Freeman describes what it’s like to be demonized by the president of the United States:
Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss were doing their jobs. Helping people vote.
— Adam Schiff (@SenAdamSchiff) June 21, 2022
But when an increasingly desperate Donald Trump spread a conspiracy his own Attorney General said was baseless, their lives were turned upside down.
Nearly two years later, they still have not recovered. pic.twitter.com/onupw9pUl7
Moss and Freeman embody what Jan. 6 was all about: Black citizenship, Black authority, Black power and the violent white backlash against it.








