January 11, 2022
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Jim Jordan refuses to cooperate on Capitol riot inquiry

The committee requested that the interview be arranged on either January 3 or 4, or that Jordan meet investigators during the week starting January 10….reports Asian Lite News

Republican Congressman Jim Jordan has rejected a request from the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021 Capitol riot to voluntarily cooperate with the probe.

“This request is far outside the bounds of any legitimate inquiry, violates core Constitutional principles, and would serve to further erode legislative norms,” Xinhua news agency reported citing a letter Jordan wrote to Bennie Thompson, a Democrat from Mississippi who chairs the committee.

“As you well know, I have no relevant information that would assist the Select Committee in advancing any legitimate legislative purpose,” Jordan said in the letter sent on Sunday.

The committee in late December wrote to the Republican House member, requesting an interview with him about the riot, claiming that Jordan, as a staunch ally of Donald Trump, regularly interacted with the former President both in the lead-up to the 2020 presidential election and in the aftermath of it.

“We understand that you had at least one and possibly multiple communications with President Trump on January 6. We would like to discuss each such communication with you in detail,” Thompson wrote in his letter.

Trump seeks to keep records from Capitol riot probe panel

The committee requested that the interview be arranged on either January 3 or 4, or that Jordan meet investigators during the week starting January 10.

Jordan has repeatedly blasted the committee’s effort as politically motivated, once acknowledging that he did speak with Trump on the day of the riot.

“I spoke with him on January 6. I mean, I talked with President Trump all the time and that’s … I don’t think that’s unusual,” he said in an interview with Spectrum News in the summer of 2021.

On anniversary of US Capitol riots, US President Joe Biden had taken direct aim at his predecessor Donald Trump, accusing the latter of putting a “dagger at the throat of democracy”, while a divided nation grapples with the fallout from the January 6, 2021 Capitol riots that clearly threatened Congress.

Speaking in Washington on the anniversary of the attack by Trump’s supporters on Congress, he called him a “defeated President” who did “nothing for hours as police were assaulted, lives at risk, the nation’s Capitol under siege”.

He pointedly refused to mention Trump’s name in his speech at the Capitol while making the most direct attack on him so far.

On ‘1/6’, as the day last year has come to be known, Trump’s supporters marched to the Capitol after attending a rally by Trump who proclaimed that he had won the election but it had been “stolen” from him and Biden was “illegitimately” being made President.

Trump’s legal challenges had already failed and even election officials from his party had refused to interfere with the election results.

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