“It is our obligation to seek Donald Trump’s testimony,” said Bennie Thompson, Chairman of the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 riots.
“There’s precedent in American history for Congress to compel the testimony of a President.”
Trump is not the first sitting or former President asked by the Congress to give testimony — there have been at least seven previous instances of it — but there is only one previous instance of a former President defying the subpoena, Harry S. Truman. Trump is also likely to refuse to testify.
Thursday was the ninth and possibly the final public hearing of the nine-member committee, which has two Republicans. It has deposed hundreds of witnesses, including top officials and aides of former President Trump and associates such as Roger Stone, who and others appeared but refused to say anything asserting their constitutional right to not implicate themselves.
Hordes of Trump’s supporters had marched on to US Congress after a rally in which the former President and his associates had railed against the election, falsely alleging Biden won fraudulently.
Trump had called on them to go to Capitol Hill — and he would along with them, he told them — and prevent a joint sitting of Congress from certifying Biden’s victory.
Trump was dissuaded by his Security Service protectors from accompanying the rioters, an aide told the committee in one of the hearings, who also provided shocking details of how the former President physically grappled with his Security Service personnel, and had tried to grab the steering wheel of the presidential limousine to guide towards the Capitol.
Representative Liz Cheney, the Republican who is Deputy Chair of the committee, said the panel must hear from Trump calling him “January 6’s central player”.
“Every American is entitled to those answers,” she added.
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