by Matt Margolis, PJ Media:
In the four years since the Capitol riot, Democrats have tried incessantly to turn it into a national tragedy akin to 9/11 and/or the Pearl Harbor attack. With the goal of preventing Trump from being able to seek the presidency again, they even called it an insurrection (it wasn’t) and accused Trump of inciting it (he didn’t).
TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
Their efforts failed, and Trump was reelected on November 5, becoming the first Republican presidential candidate to win the national popular vote since George W. Bush. Oh, what a sweet victory it was. On Monday, Trump’s victory over Kamala Harris was certified, and once again, Democrats proved they just can’t let their phony baloney narrative go.
I won’t bother posting all the tweets from Democrats waxing philosophical about the difference between January 6, 2025, and January 6, 2021, but I will show you this cringy post from Sen. Chuck Schumer and some silly “moment of prayer” he and a few other January Sixth-copalians held on Monday.
Today, we held a moment of prayer near the door where rioters first broke into the Capitol on January 6, 2021.
We mourn the lives lost in connection to the attack.
We mourn the officers who died in the days, weeks, and months after the attack.
We pray for their families, that… pic.twitter.com/A8m6BJsPeB— Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) January 6, 2025
They’re really trying hard, aren’t they?
The problem for them is that it’s not working. Despite all their efforts, that day didn’t leave the lasting political scar on the public Democrats had hoped for. Despite the massive media coverage, congressional hearings, and the general pushing of the narrative that the riot was an “insurrection,” most Americans have moved on.
CNN’s chief data reporter Harry Enten laid out the data starkly: back in early 2021, a majority of voters—56 percent—believed Trump’s actions on January 6 should disqualify him from the presidency. That figure included those who supported removing him from office. But by 2023, the percentage dropped to 47 percent, flipping the narrative. As Enten put it, “This nine-point shift was tremendous” because it took the issue from a majority stance to a minority one. Trump captured the overwhelming support of the other 53 percent, effectively neutralizing the talking point.