President JOE BIDEN rarely says DONALD TRUMP's name — intentionally so. The president has told reporters in the past that he doesn't spend a lot of time thinking about his predecessor, waving off questions about his antics to focus on the job at hand. Not today. In his speech commemorating the Jan. 6 siege of the Capitol, Biden skewered the former president, putting blame for the unprecedented attack on Congress squarely on his shoulders. "His bruised ego matters more to him than our democracy, our Constitution," Biden said of Trump, whom he goaded as "a defeated former president, defeated by a margin of over 7 million of your votes in a full and free and fair election." Other quotes from the speech: — "You can't love your country only when you win. You can't obey the law only when it is convenient. You can't be patriotic when you embrace and enable lies." — "I will stand in this breach. I will defend this nation. I will allow no one to place a dagger at the throat of democracy." — "This isn't about being bogged down in the past. This is about making sure the past isn't buried. That is what great nations do. They don't bury the truth." As he left the Hill, Biden said this to reporters about why he was so forceful: "The way you have to heal is you have to recognize the extent of the wound." CUE REPUBLICAN OUTRAGE — On Fox News, anchor BRET BAIER said the remarks were "the strongest President Biden has been in a speech." But elected Republicans decried Biden's address as too partisan on a day of remembrance. Sen. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.), via Twitter: "What [a] brazen politicization of January 6 by President Biden. I wonder if the Taliban who now rule Afghanistan with al-Qaeda elements present, contrary to President Biden's beliefs, are allowing this speech to be carried?" From there, Graham went on a Twitter thread that touched on the events of Jan. 6, thanked the U.S. Capitol Police, bashed Democrats' "so-called voting rights acts," described the Biden administration as in "free fall," and said that Biden's "efforts to politicize January 6 will fall flat." Two thoughts: 1) Doesn't that response itself politicize the date? 2) Honestly, it's hard to truly remember what happened on Jan. 6 if you ignore Trump's role in it, as he sat in the Oval Office ignoring pleas to call off the dogs. Speaking of … THE COUNTERPROGRAMMING COMMENCES — Trump might have canceled his press conference for today, but he didn't remain quiet. In a 270-word statement directly responding to Biden's speech, Trump repeated many of the same old lies about the 2020 election being "rigged," falsely claimed that ballots in Georgia were sold for $10 a piece, said "Big Tech was used illegally," yada yada yada. Trump ended his statement with this: "Never forget the crime of the 2020 Presidential Election. Never give up!" His most ardent followers certainly aren't. — Florida Gov. RON DESANTIS said that Jan. 6 commemorations were a way for Democrats and the media to "smear" Trump supporters, likened the memorials to "Christmas" for news outlets and predicted that the coverage would be "nauseating," Gary Fineout reports from Tallahassee. "'Jan. 6 allows them to create narratives that are negative about people that supported Donald Trump,' said DeSantis, who also rejected labeling the riots as an 'insurrection' because no one has been charged with any crimes that fit that definition. … [H]e criticized those who compared the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to the Jan. 6 riots, saying it was 'an insult to the people going into those buildings.'" — On Twitter, Rep. MATT GAETZ (R-Fla.) teased an episode of his podcast in which he suggested that Republicans need to "take over the January 6th Committee, issue subpoenas, and put the truth, however uncomfortable it may be, before the entire country." In a separate clip with Gaetz, Rep. MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE (R-Ga.) echoed that call: "I'm ready to rip the whole thing wide open and expose everything." Suddenly, we're having flashbacks to Gaetz and dozens of House Republicans storming the SCIF during impeachment hearings. — Gaetz and Greene also appeared on this morning's live stream of STEVE BANNON's podcast. (Reminder: Bannon was indicted two months ago on criminal contempt charges for ignoring a subpoena from the House Jan. 6 committee.) "We're ashamed of nothing. We're proud of the work we did on Jan. 6 to make legitimate arguments about election integrity," Gaetz said on Bannon's show. "And we're actually going to walk the grounds that patriotic Americans walked from the White House to the Capitol." 20-second clip — Meanwhile in Georgia, a group of Republicans had been planning an event to honor not just "those killed or hurt during the Jan. 6 riot, but [also] the '"J6" Prisoners' and 'J6 Patriots,'" WaPo's Jonathan Edwards writes. "After bipartisan blowback, the Cobb County GOP on Wednesday canceled what it had been calling a 'prayer vigil,' citing 'mischaracterization of the event.'" — In D.C., two competing vigils are planned for today: One outside the Capitol and one outside the D.C. jail in support of the so-called "political prisoners" held there. More from WaPo's Ellie Silverman SPOTTED ON THE HOUSE FLOOR, per NYT's Emily Cochrane, for the Hill pool: " DICK CHENEY is indeed with LIZ CHENEY, masked and chatting with STENY HOYER on the House floor. As of now, I do not see any Republicans besides the Cheneys." — ABC's Jon Karl caught up with the former VP at the Capitol. "I'm deeply disappointed we don't have better leadership in the Republican Party to restore the Constitution," Cheney said, noting that his daughter is an exception. He told reporters later that the current GOP leadership is "not a leadership that resembles any of the folks I knew when I was here for 10 years." WHAT THEY'RE SAYING: — Assistant House Speaker KATHERINE CLARK (D-Mass.) is pushing the Senate to go nuclear, citing Jan. 6 in an op-ed for Newsweek that lefties will cheer: "The Way to Combat the Horror of January 6 Is to Abolish the Filibuster" : "The vast majority of Republicans in the House and Senate simply won't put democracy ahead of their own desperate pursuit of power. Every day, they attack our democracy by promoting the Big Lie, refusing to participate in the January 6 investigation, and supporting voter suppression laws. … So, we must go it alone. And to do that, we must abolish the filibuster." — Cheney (R-Wyo.) on "TODAY" chided her party: "If you look at what's happening today in my party, the Republican Party, rather than reject what happened on [Jan. 6] — reject the lies about the election and make clear that a president who engaged in those activities can never be president again — unfortunately, too many in my own party are embracing that former president, are looking the other way, are minimizing the danger. That's how democracies die, and we simply cannot let that happen." More from NBC — Rep. ANDY KIM (D-N.J.) spoke to our colleagues JC Whittington and Monica Akhtar about the events of Jan. 6 and the viral photos showing him helping clean up the Capitol after the attack. With video — Sen. MITT ROMNEY (R-Utah): "We ignore the lessons of January 6th at our own peril. Democracy is fragile; it cannot survive without leaders of integrity and character who care more about the strength of our Republic than about winning the next election." Full statement — AP's Farnoush Amiri has a piece detailing the racism that was on display one year ago in the Capitol. Rep. BENNIE THOMPSON (D-Miss.), chair of the Jan. 6 committee, said: "I saw the kind of hatred in the eyes of the people who broke in the Capitol. It was that same kind of hatred I saw in people who wanted to stop people of color from casting a ballot for the candidate of their choice in Mississippi." HEADS UP: VP KAMALA HARRIS will sit down for an interview about the anniversary of Jan. 6 tonight with PBS NewsHour's Judy Woodruff. Good Thursday afternoon. |