çó election, and encouraging people to gather in washington on january 6th. now their testimony couldçó hel doj fill in the gap of their investigation,cbma11e■ when it comes to trump s conduct jf before, during, and after abc news notes that some of the aides that have been ordered to testify have already appeared before the grand jury, but did not answer some questions related tot( interactions with e formerfáq r donald trump is reportedly likely to appeal. joining us nowj are our my guests.lpw3t(fá it is good to see you all. carol, let s start with you. there s always axd pointr trump novela, where you have to got( back to the glossary andok reminded of who all theseq peopp are, now ordered to testify. it s like a who s who of the trump administration. walkm3t through who theyjf are. yout( know, you re absolutel right to characteriz]■á it that way. fos haven t been mentioned in a long time while we have been covering the biden white house. let s take a few
on why joe biden chose prosperity over vengeance. plus, david wallace-wells on how so many western countries got covid so wrong. and is there any way in the world to convince vaccine skeptic trump supporters they should get their shots? all in starts right now. good evening, from new york. i m chris hayes. we ve got big developments on two of the biggest mysteries surrounding the january 6th insurrection. what happened to capitol police officer brian sicknick? that led to his death. and who planted pipe bombs, next to the rnc and the dnc? there is still a ton that we do not know about that day. though, today, we learned a few more pieces but before we get into that, a little context. because over the last two months, there has been a concerted evident on the right to spin a counternarrative about this violent insurrection. you remember, you saw it happen, live, on tv. an attack, that sought, explicitly, for, really, the first time in american history, to disrupt the pea
world to convince vaccine skeptic trump supporters they should get their shots? all in starts right now. good evening, from new york. i m chris hayes. we ve got big developments on two of the biggest mysteries surrounding the january 6th insurrection. what happened to capitol police officer brian sicknick that led to his death? and who planted pipe bombs, next to the rnc and the dnc? there is still a ton that we do not know about that day. though, today, we learned a few more pieces but before we get into that, a little context. because over the last two months, there has been a concerted evident on the right to spin a counter narrative about this violent insurrection. you remember, you saw it happen, live, on tv. an attack, that sought, explicitly, for, really, the first time in american history, to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power. from one administration to the next. that was the goal. there have been people with big audiences spreading the idea, that these attac
next week the first findings of the investigation and making good to investigate the investigators with the new house majority. joining us is democratic congressman of robert garcia a member of the house homeland security and oversight committee back with me. thank you so much for being with us. talk to us about the experience today. what it was that you saw at this jail. yeah. thank you. first, it was hard to see. at the end of the day we were there. we saw the insurrectionists that attacked the capitol and hurt law enforcement officials so to be there was difficult. the worst part is seeing the inmates, the republicans rush to them and talking to them, patting them on the back. interacting with them. they showed no remorse. these are people treating
of january 6th. it was an attack on our nation s capital. people died. police officers were injured. 140 police officers, capitol police and metropolitan d.c. police were jurisdiction and people lost fingers, lost eyes. insurrectionists tried to stop us from certifying the election. we have to have an investigation. it would be my hope and expectation that it would be as bipartisan as possible. this isn t this isn t a partisan issue. it is the health of our democracy. it shouldn t be. so there has to be a committee and a commission on this. unfortunately, we saw so many republican colleagues unwilling to vote on what had been a negotiated bipartisan commission structure modeled after 9/11 that republican representative of new york and representative johnson put forming. in the absence of that we have to move forward with a commission and if this is the