By GARY A. WARNER/Oregon Capital Bureau
Oregon’s congressional delegation found themselves trapped by protestors who stormed the Capitol in protest of the Electoral College vote to verify the election of Joe Biden as President.
Pro-trump protestors broke into the main part of the Capitol, forcing senators and House members to lock themselves inside the chambers.
“Lock the doors, lock the doors,” Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, shouted.
In the House, one door was barricaded as well as locked. Protestors later were able to break in, trashing the chambers as well as briefly occupying offices, before officers with tear gas drove them out.
When he was finally in a shelter-in-place position with security, Wyden said the violence that led to at least one death was the fault of the resident of the White House at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue.
“What’s happening today in our nation’s Capitol is a direct assault on democracy, a riot by insurrectionists that caps off four years of Donald Trump fanning the flames of fanaticism,” Wyden said in a statement. “Every Republican lawmaker who supported his efforts to overturn a legitimate election shares responsibility for the violence at the heart of our democracy.”
Wyden said later that President Trump had to be held responsible for the rioting. He had encouraged protestors to come to the Electoral College count, promising a “wild” time.
The United States Constitution calls for Congress to verify the Electoral College vote count in the presidential election that Biden won by over seven million votes in the popular vote. The electors cast their official vote on Dec. 14 with Biden defeating Trump by 306-232 Electoral College votes.
Wednesday’s usually formal and sedate joint event of Congress was expected to be different, but not violent.
Vice President Mike Pence opened the proceedings with mahogany boxes of Electoral College votes from each state.
When Arizona’s 11 votes were opened, some Republicans mounted objections to votes from Arizona, the first of several states they said they would contest. A day-long debate was expected, with no chance that the objections would succeed in attracting a majority in either chamber.
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon, had started live-tweeting the events in Congress, writing “Stop the Coup!”
“GOP Senators just officially objected to counting the votes in a state Trump lost with one goal: keeping Trump in power despite his election loss,” Merkley wrote. “This is a direct assault on our We the People Constitution.’
The tweet string went silent as protestors made their way up the stairs and into the Capitol shortly after the beginning of the debates in the House and Senate.
Merkley later held a press conference on the phone from a “secure” room he and others had been moved to at an undisclosed location.
“That’s what we heard on the floor today — we should listen to the mob. And that’s why we should stop the election of Joe Biden,” Merkley said. “It should never have come to this.”
Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, who was sworn in as the new representative of Oregon’s 2nd Congressional District just days earlier, had joined last month with fellow Republican representative-elects in a statement to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., calling for an investigation into the 2020 presidential election.
Bentz has repeatedly declined to give a yes or no answer to the question of whether he would join in the objections. Bentz was not on the floor when protestors broke into the House chamber. House members rotated to the floor because of COVID-19 distancing protocols.
Bentz said the objections to the Electoral College votes were going on “according to the rules” and that those backing the effort should have let it proceed. “There’s no reason to be breaking in and putting people in fear,” Bentz said.
Oregon’s four other House members are Democrats who supported the Electoral College result in Biden’s favor.
Rep. Suzanne Bonamici said after being evacuated from the House side of the Capitol that she didn’t think what was happening was possible in the United States.
“It’s like a third-world country,” Bonamici told The Oregonian in a phone call. “Someone has been shot in the Capitol. The Capitol windows have been shot out. It’s unbelievable.”
Rep. Earl Blumenauer used Twitter to link Trump’s unwillingness to accept the Biden win as the genesis for the attack on the heart of constitutional democracy in the nation.
“The people storming the U.S. Capitol building right now are domestic terrorists emboldened by Trump and every Republican who has spread lies about the results of the presidential election. This has to stop.”
Rep. Peter DeFazio told The Oregonian the attack on Congress was a “attempt to invalidate the election.” Rep. Kurt Schrader, whose district covers Lincoln County, told the newspaper “it’s pretty horrific” and said the “self-described patriots” were “terrorists.”
But Schrader said Congress would get back to work as soon as it was safe and finish the vote to finalize the process leading to the Jan. 20 inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden and Vice-President-elect Kamala Harris.