President Donald Trump refused to acknowledge his 2020 election loss in a video shot January 7, 2021, one day after the Capitol insurrection, the committee investigating the attack revealed during a bombshell hearing on Thursday.
“I don’t want to say the election is over,” Trump says in the footage, a behind-the-scenes moment from a video he shot to address the violence at the US Capitol the previous day.
Thursday’s prime-time hearing of the January 6 House select committee marked the first time the footage of Trump had been publicly shown.
In the video, Trump can be seen workshopping his remarks, hesitating to comment on what would happen to protestors who broke the law.
“I can’t say that,” Trump says in the video. “I’m not gonna ― I already said, ‘You will pay.’”
He resisted explicitly acknowledging his election loss. Ivanka Trump, his daughter and former advisor, can be heard speaking from off-camera, helping the former president figure out how to note the certification of the 2020 election results.
Thursday’s hearing sought to detail what Trump did for more than three hours on January 6 as a mob stormed the US Capitol in an attempt to prevent Congress from certifying the 2020 election. The hearing featured clips from the taped depositions of members of Trump’s inner circle and others who were present on January 6, as well as in-person testimony from former deputy national security adviser Matt Pottinger and former deputy press secretary Sarah Matthews.
The January 7 clip was not the only behind-the-scenes footage of the former president aired during the hearing. The committee also showed outtakes from a video Trump recorded on January 6 as the riot was taking place.
Trump went off the official White House script while recording that video, the committee revealed.
Matthews spoke further about Trump’s messaging as the riot took place, claiming Trump had not wanted to mention “peace” in a tweet condemning the violence, and only put out a statement after Ivanka Trump suggested including the phrase “stay peaceful.”
“I don’t want to say the election is over,” Trump says in the footage, a behind-the-scenes moment from a video he shot to address the violence at the US Capitol the previous day.
The Jan. 6 panel played never-before-seen footage from a speech by then-President Donald Trump taken a day after the Capitol attack.
"I don't want to say the election is over," he said. https://t.co/ZBU3Mdj5zUpic.twitter.com/0KrhKzobDk
— The Associated Press (@AP) July 22, 2022
Thursday’s prime-time hearing of the January 6 House select committee marked the first time the footage of Trump had been publicly shown.
In the video, Trump can be seen workshopping his remarks, hesitating to comment on what would happen to protestors who broke the law.
“I can’t say that,” Trump says in the video. “I’m not gonna ― I already said, ‘You will pay.’”
He resisted explicitly acknowledging his election loss. Ivanka Trump, his daughter and former advisor, can be heard speaking from off-camera, helping the former president figure out how to note the certification of the 2020 election results.
Thursday’s hearing sought to detail what Trump did for more than three hours on January 6 as a mob stormed the US Capitol in an attempt to prevent Congress from certifying the 2020 election. The hearing featured clips from the taped depositions of members of Trump’s inner circle and others who were present on January 6, as well as in-person testimony from former deputy national security adviser Matt Pottinger and former deputy press secretary Sarah Matthews.
The January 7 clip was not the only behind-the-scenes footage of the former president aired during the hearing. The committee also showed outtakes from a video Trump recorded on January 6 as the riot was taking place.
The Jan. 6 panel showed a statement prepared for then-President Trump that said "I am asking you to leave the Capitol Hill region NOW and go home in a peaceful way."
Trump instead repeated baseless claims of voter fraud without condemning the violence. https://t.co/ZBU3Mdj5zUpic.twitter.com/THw3u1gv6Y
— The Associated Press (@AP) July 22, 2022
Trump went off the official White House script while recording that video, the committee revealed.
Matthews spoke further about Trump’s messaging as the riot took place, claiming Trump had not wanted to mention “peace” in a tweet condemning the violence, and only put out a statement after Ivanka Trump suggested including the phrase “stay peaceful.”