An unedited video of then-President Donald Trump recording an address to the nation on January 7, 2021, is displayed on a screen during a hearing by the House Select Committee to investigate the January 6th attack on the US Capitol.
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House January 6 investigators showed Trump recording his speech a day after the Capitol attack.
Trump struggled through the speech and edited out the line, “The election is over.”
On January 7, the president also backed down from more harshly criticizing the mob that stormed the Capitol.
A day after the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol, then-President Donald Trump condemned his riotous supporters, saying they did not represent “our movement” or the country.
But he refused to say four words suggested by aides: “The election is over.”
For the first time Thursday, the House committee investigating the Capitol attack aired unedited footage of Trump recording his national address on January 7, 2021, in which he declared that rioters involved in the insurrection “broke the law” and “will pay.” It was a marked change in tone from the day of the attack, in which Trump recorded a video telling the angry mob: “”Go home. We love you, you’re very special.”
The outtake shows Trump fumbling through his speech and ordering edits on-the-fly. Wearing a suit and pale blue tie, he appears to slam his hand on the podium in frustration at times and awkwardly stops after the word, “yesterday.”
—January 6th Committee (@January6thCmte) July 22, 2022
At one point in the footage, Trump begins to say, “But this election is now over. Congress has certified the results.”
Then, he catches himself.
“I don’t want to say the election is over,” Trump said. “I just want to say Congress certified the results announcing the election is over, OK?”
The outtake served to underscore a key point of the House January 6 committee’s hearings: Trump repeatedly refused to accept the outcome of the 2020 election and turned to increasingly desperate measures to overturn the result, even as top aides advised that his claims of widespread voter fraud were baseless.
