A couple of months into his tenure as House speaker, Republican Rep. Kevin McCarthy thought it’d be a good idea to give Tucker Carlson exclusive access to Jan. 6 security camera footage. The results were predictable: The host, before his departure from Fox News, cherry-picked footage that allowed him to tell the deceptive story he set out to tell, sparking outrage from both parties and law enforcement.
Nearly 10 months later, McCarthy’s successor, House Speaker Mike Johnson decided it was time to go a step further and release thousands of hours of security footage to the public. The results were again predictable: As The New York Times reported, the move has “fueled a renewed effort by Republican lawmakers and far-right activists to rewrite the history of the attack that day and exonerate the pro-Trump rioters who took part.”
The Times added that many on the right, as if on cue, are “using the Jan. 6 video to circulate an array of false claims and conspiracy theories about the largest attack on the Capitol in centuries.”
House Intelligence Committee Chair Mike Turner was asked if he’s comfortable with this. The Ohio Republican’s answer left much to be desired. The conservative Washington Times reported:
House Intelligence Committee Chair Mike Turner said House Speaker Mike Johnson’s decision to make public the Capitol security video footage of the Jan. 6, 2021, riot is an important step for Americans to learn the truth about what happened that day. “It’s important for Americans to know the truth,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Using careful language, Turner said the discussion surrounding Jan. 6 has been “fraught with an unbelievable amount of misinformation and untruths,” and with the footage released, the public won’t be “depending upon really partisan descriptions of what happened.”
When NBC News’ Kristen Welker noted that some of Turner’s Republican colleagues have “cherry-picked some of the images to frankly…
Read the full article here