Biden says Americans should not forget Capitol attack
US President Joe Biden has criticised what he calls an âunrelenting effortâ to downplay a mob of Donald Trump supporters overrunning the US Capitol in an attempt to block certification of the 2020 election.
Mr Biden is seeking to contrast that dayâs chaos with what he promises will be an orderly transition returning Mr Trump to power in America for a second term.
In an opinion piece published on Sunday in The Washington Post, Mr Biden recalled the events of January 6 2021, writing that âviolent insurrectionists attacked the Capitol.â
âWe should be proud that our democracy withstood this assault,â Mr Biden wrote. âAnd we should be glad we will not see such a shameful attack again this year.â
US Congress will convene amid snow in Washington on Monday to certify Mr Trumpâs victory in Novemberâs election â in a session presided over by the candidate he defeated, Vice President Kamala Harris.
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The 235 judges confirmed by my administration include a record number with backgrounds that have long been overlooked: advocates for civil rights, workersâ rights,⊠pic.twitter.com/tlDcgFbzVM
No violence, or even procedural objections, are expected this time, marking a return to a US tradition that launches the peaceful transfer of presidential power.
That is despite Mr Trump continuing to deny that he lost to Biden in 2020, already musing publicly about staying beyond the Constitutionâs two-term White House limit, and promising to pardon some of the more than 1,250 people who have pleaded guilty or were convicted of crimes for the Capitol siege.
In his opinion piece, Biden says of the certification process, âAfter what we all witnessed on January 6 2021, we know we can never again take it for granted.â
He does not mention Mr Trump directly but says âan unrelenting effort has been under way to rewrite â even erase â the history of that day.
âTo tell us we didnât see what we all saw with our own eyes,â Mr Biden wrote. âWe cannot allow the truth to be lost.â
He vowed that the âelection will be certified peacefully. I have invited the incoming president to the White House on the morning of January 20, and I will be present for his inauguration that afternoonâ â even though Mr Trump skipped Mr Bidenâs inauguration in 2021.
âBut on this day, we cannot forget,â Mr Biden added. âWe should commit to remembering January 6 2021, every year. To remember it as a day when our democracy was put to the test and prevailed. To remember that democracy â even in America â is never guaranteed.â
The published piece followed Mr Biden telling reporters at the White House earlier on Sunday that the history of what occurred on January 6 2021 âshould not be rewrittenâ, and adding: âI donât think it should be forgotten.â
The US President spent much of 2024 warning voters that Mr Trump was a serious threat to the nationâs democracy.
And this past week, Mr Biden awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal to Liz Cheney and Bennie Thompson, leaders of the congressional investigation into the Capitol riot.
As he did with his opinion piece, Mr Biden used his comments to reporters to stress that his administration is overseeing a peaceful handover of power â unlike the last one.
âIâve reached out to make sure the smooth transition,â Mr Biden said of Mr Trumpâs incoming administration. âWeâve got to get back to basic, normal transfer of power.â
Asked if he still viewed his soon-to-be successor in the White House as a threat to democracy, Mr Biden responded: âI think what he did was a genuine threat to democracy. Iâm hopeful weâre beyond that now.â





