rioters climbing the west wall of the capitol

The day we watched a coup attempt in America

People in the U.S. stopped what they were doing to watch an event they struggled to comprehend—a mob overrunning the nation’s capital.

A mob of violent supporters of President Donald Trump climb over a wall of the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, January 6, breaching the building and disrupting the confirmation of the 2020 election win by Joe Biden.

Photograph by Jose Luis Magana, AP
ByCynthia Gorney
January 6, 2021
5 min read

January 6, 2021, 4:00 PM EST, and on the live-news television screen: INSURRECTION IN WASHINGTON FOLLOWING TRUMP ENCOURAGMENT.

That sentence, the sounds, these images are no longer the material of frightened speculation. We are reading, hearing, watching a coup attempt in the United States. That man brandishing a transparent shield as he smashes a window of the Capitol—that is an American, we can safely assume, cheered on by those around him as two guys in black climb in through broken glass.

If you’re digesting this the way most of us are—not from the nation’s capital, that is, with the wailing sirens and emergency vehicles; nor from inside the buses into which members of Congress are being hustled from their building to protect themselves—you have stopped whatever you were doing and are struggling, right now, simply to believe the thing that is taking place. Not their building, after all. Our building. The people’s building, the designated center of this nation’s governance.

For all our recent talk about the fragility of our democracy, every American generation alive today has maintained a certain smugness about the concept of the coup: Other nations teeter this way, their leaders forced aside, their institutions assaulted in the name of “national security.” We condemn such naked grabs for power, of course. Or our government tries to maintain neutrality without formal approval. We understand this as something that could never happen to us.

People stand on either side of a door with shattered glass windows

A Capitol police officer looks out of a broken window as rioters gather in and around the Capitol. Police and security were unable to stop them from breaching the home of the American government.

Photograph by Tasos Katopodis, Getty
People hide among seating and railing

Lawmakers and staffers shelter in the gallery of the U.S. House as pro-Trump mobs try to break into the chamber. Gas masks were distributed and the building was evacuated.

Andrew Harnik, AP
People with signs inside the U.S. Capitol Building

Once inside, insurgents had free reign of the Capitol building. They roamed through the lawmakers' chambers and rifled through abandoned offices.

Photograph by Victor J. Blue, Bloomberg/Getty
a riotor sitting in Nancy Pelosi's chair

A Trump supporter who forcefully entered the U.S. Capitol poses for a photo at the desk of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.

Photograph by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images
A crowd watches screens with President Trump's face on them with the white house in the background

A rally for President Trump that assembled in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, turned into a march to the U.S. Capitol and a violent attempt to stop the certification of the election results. It took hours for law enforcement to regain control of the situation.

Photograph by John Minchillo, AP

This will be an I-remember-when-I-heard event, like assassination attempts and terrorist attacks. The day a sitting U.S. president remained silent for two hours, communicating by means of a single “remain peaceful” tweet, as men and women cheered the Capitol’s storming while carrying flags and signs bearing his name—each of us will carry our own visuals most vividly when we recall it. The uniformed riot police, marching toward the building to let an electoral transition proceed? The Trump-flag marchers flanking a FOX reporter, shouting “fake news!” while he’s narrating exactly what he’s seeing around him? The police officer pointing guns inside the House chamber, their faces masked against the coronavirus? (Terrifying pictures show chaos as mob storms U.S. Capitol.)

4:15 now, and for just a few moments, here’s the voice and visage of President-Elect Joe Biden. It would be comforting to imagine that in years to come we will recall this, the quiet-spoken man in the blue suit, invoking Abraham Lincoln, his voice taut with disgust as he implores President Donald Trump to ask his people to stand down. “This is the United. States. of America,” Biden is saying. “I call on this mob to pull back and allow the work of democracy to go forward.”

America is so much better than this, Biden says. It is an idea to cling to, even in moments immediately after the president-elect’s statement, when the television switches visuals again: the man who broke into Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s office and sat at a desk—her desk?—with a flag, which lies crumpled at his side. He’s smiling. He looks extremely pleased with himself. Before him, scrawled in capital letters on a filed folder, are the words WE WILL NOT BACK DOWN.

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