Donald Trump calls jailed Capitol rioters 'hostages', vows to win 'for the third time'

The former US president says those prosecuted for the 2021 Capitol attack should be freed, downplaying his role in the siege.

Donald Trump with his hands out-streched to his sides in front of an American flag.

Donald Trump referred to those charged for the US Capitol attack as 'hostages'. Source: Getty / Scott Olson

Key Points
  • Trump said he will win "for the third time" in November.
  • If elected, he said he would pardon many jailed for the 2021 Capitol riots.
  • Trump was impeached for inciting insurrection and faces multiple felony charges over his conduct leading up to and during the violence.
Donald Trump hit the campaign trail in the first-in-the-nation presidential nominating state of Iowa, as Americans marked the anniversary of the deadly assault on the US Capitol by a mob of his supporters.

Many watched in horror three years ago on 6 January 2021, as rioters — egged on by the ex-president and fueled by his false claims of voter fraud — stormed the seat of US democracy in a bid to halt the transfer of power.
In a rambling, two-hour speech to supporters in Newton, Iowa, Trump did not delve into the events of that day, but described those jailed over their roles in the assault as "hostages." He has said that if elected, he will pardon many.

Trump , his putative rival in November's election. He said Biden has overseen economic decline and invited chaos at the nation's borders while failing to stop Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

"I would've absolutely stopped Putin," he said.

Trump warned of World War Three if Biden is re-elected, adding, "This is our last chance to save America."

Never having given up on the fiction that he won the 2020 election, Trump declared that in November he will win "for the third time."

The runaway leader in the race for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, Trump was impeached for inciting insurrection and faces multiple felony charges over his conduct leading up to and during the violence.
Donald Trump supporters holding campaign signs behind a yellow plastic tape.
More than a thousand people were in the crowd where Donald Trump spoke on the third anniversary of the events of 6 January 2021. Source: Getty / Scott Olson
In an evening appearance at a middle school in the town of Clinton, Trump gave another meandering speech in which he attacked Biden as too old to govern, incompetent and leading the United States to ruin with overrun open borders.

"We are a failing nation," Trump said in the hour-long address. "We're going to bring it back from hell," he added.

Biden, who offered blistering criticism of Trump in a speech Friday, has no public events planned this weekend, the White House said.

Trump leads rivals Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis by more than 30 points in Iowa, which stages its Republican nominating contest — known as a "caucus" — on 15 January, kicking off the 2024 primary season.

Trump has described 6 January as "a beautiful day" and has made the "great patriots" and "hostages" imprisoned over the riot a cause celebre.
The false claim that Democratic election theft led to January 6 has become orthodoxy among many Republicans, with hard-liners in Congress promoting the fantasy that the chaos at the Capitol was a "false flag" operation by federal agents.

A Washington Post/University of Maryland poll released Thursday found that 44 per cent of Trump voters believe the FBI organized and encouraged the riot.

But polls also show that Democrats and independents hold strongly negative views of the riot and the rioters, and of Trump's role in encouraging them.

"We will never forget the horrific events of January 6, 2021," Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a statement Saturday, adding that those responsible "must be held accountable because in this country no one is above the law."
The House, controlled at the time by the Democrats, impeached Trump for inciting the violence, which was linked to the deaths of five police officers and several rioters, although he was acquitted by allies in the Senate and denies all wrongdoing.

A later congressional investigation concluded that the violence was the culmination of a criminal conspiracy led by Trump to subvert the election.

The ex-president is facing multiple federal and state felony charges related to the events.

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4 min read
Published 7 January 2024 7:31pm
Source: AFP


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