
More recently, ahead of the House committee's first public hearing, Cheney described the Capitol attack as part of an "extremely well-organized" conspiracy. In those remarks, legal experts saw a clear reference to a charge the Justice Department has brought about numerous accused Capitol rioters. Meadows' testimony will bear on a key question in front of this Committee: Did Donald Trump, through action or inaction, corruptly seek to obstruct or impede Congress's official proceeding to count electoral votes?" As the House panel took steps to hold former White House chief of staff in contempt, she said: "Mr. In December, she appeared to directly address Trump's potential criminal culpability when she called attention to a federal statute making it illegal to obstruct an official proceeding. And while other top Republicans have only vaguely alluded to Trump eventually facing consequences from the Capitol attack, Cheney has gotten specific in public remarks. Liz Cheney has emerged as the face of the House panel investigating the January 6 attack.Īs one of just two Republicans on the committee, Cheney has established herself as the fiercest critic of former President Donald Trump on Capitol Hill. She is not the committee's chair, but in many ways, Rep. Liz Cheney was censured by the Republican National Committee over her participation in the January 6 inquiry. "It's our democracy that stands to lose if we don't get it right." "If there is something we think that's of value that a hearing could amplify, we are absolutely open to doing it," he said in an Insider interview. Thompson also told Insider that his committee is not ruling out the possibility of holding more hearings after the six in June. "There's a lot of other pieces of legislation that basically alter the trajectory of so many people in my district, in this country, as well as other pieces of legislation, but nothing compares to the importance of this," he said. In a recent interview, the Mississippi Democrat told Insider that his leadership of the House committee investigating the Januattack on the Capitol stands out as the most significant work of his time in public office. Bennie Thompson has spent three decades in Congress and risen to become chair of the House Homeland Security Committee. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi says the committee's investigation is the most "significant work" he has done while in office. Here are the members of the committee to watch as the public hearings unfold.

The string of hearings will combine to provide the American public with what the House committee described as a summary of its findings about a "coordinated, multi-step effort to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and prevent the transfer of power." The initial witnesses include a documentarian who interviewed members of the Proud Boys - a far-right group whose members were charged Monday with seditious conspiracy - and Caroline Edwards, a respected Capitol Police officer believed to be the first officer injured during the January 6 attack.

Previewing Thursday's hearing, the committee said it would feature "previously unseen material documenting January 6th," along with witness testimony. It is unclear what new information the House committee will present, but the committee has reportedly concluded it has enough evidence to make a criminal referral to the Justice Department recommending charges against the former president. Looming large over the hearings is Trump, who has communicated his desire for counter programming to congressional allies.
