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US lawmakers to certify Trump win, four years after Capitol riot
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US lawmakers to certify Trump win, four years after Capitol riot

AFP

WASHINGTON—Exactly four years after Donald Trump’s supporters stormed the US Capitol, seeking to overturn his election loss, lawmakers meet on Monday to certify his 2024 win, cementing the Republican’s comeback from political ignominy.

Heightening the drama around the Jan. 6 joint session of Congress, a powerful storm was forecast to blanket Washington in snow overnight.

By almost any measure, 78-year-old Trump has navigated a remarkable return to power.

Four years ago, leaders in his own party appeared ready to turn their backs, but now they are rushing to embrace their twice-impeached, criminally convicted leader.

Having defeated Vice President Kamala Harris in November, a vengeful Trump will take office in two weeks, with the entire Republican Party—down to the last lawmaker—under his sway.

Harris role

The ceremony on Monday may prove discomfiting at best for Harris, who as vice president is mandated under the US Constitution to preside over the election certification.

The process then launches a two-week countdown towards Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20, when he will begin a second term in a ceremony on the same Capitol steps that four years ago his supporters fought up, intent on disrupting US democracy.

While Monday’s certification is expected to go off smoothly, a sense of unease hangs over the country.

A mass killing on New Years Day in New Orleans by a self-professed, US-born jihadist, and a separate suicide in a Tesla Cybertruck explosion outside a Trump property in Las Vegas made an alarming start to the year.

Meanwhile, six days of funeral ceremonies for late former Pres. Jimmy Carter got underway this weekend and all US flags on government buildings will be at half-staff for a month—including during Trump’s inauguration.

Just in case of unrest, authorities erected a ring of security fencing around the Capitol.

For his part, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson was more worried about the impending snowstorm, telling lawmakers not to leave Washington on the weekend, then find themselves stranded.

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‘Don’t leave town’

“Do not leave town,” he told Fox News on Sunday. “Whether we’re in a blizzard or not, we are going to be in that chamber making sure this is done.”

Uber-loyal Trump Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene proclaimed she would “walk to the Capitol if I have to.”

Congressional certification had largely been considered a constitutional formality until Jan. 6, 2021.

Then-President Trump broke all precedent with a concerted campaign to persuade Americans that the election had been stolen and that he, not Joe Biden, was the true winner. Finally, he tried to pressure his vice president Mike Pence to refuse to certify Biden’s victory.

In a speech outside the White House early on that Jan. 6, Trump told his followers “to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard.”

Some in media however highlighted his words that urged supporters to “fight like hell.”


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