The Morning Dispatch: January 6 Committee Gets Going

Plus: As the Delta variant runs rampant, the White House starts asking some vaccinated people to wear masks again.

(Photo By Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images.)

Happy Wednesday! The disinformation is coming from inside the house! In yesterday’s TMD, we included a “Presented Without Comment” featuring a heavily-lei’d Emmanuel Macron in French Polynesia.

We weren’t clear enough that the post was a photoshopped joke, so Dispatch fact checker Alec Dent decided to take us to task. Mea culpa, Alec.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The Centers for Disease Control updated its COVID-19 mask guidance on Tuesday, recommending that fully vaccinated people wear masks indoors once again in areas of “substantial or high transmission” to provide additional protection from the Delta variant.
  • The Tokyo Metropolitan Government reported a record number of confirmed coronavirus infections Tuesday, at 2,848 new cases city-wide. The surge comes as the Japanese capital hosts the Olympics Games after a year-long postponement due to the pandemic.
  • GOP State Rep. Jake Ellzey defeated fellow Republican Susan Wright, the widow of former Rep. Ron Wright, by nearly 7 percentage points in a special election for Texas’s sixth congressional district on Tuesday. Former President Donald Trump had endorsed and campaigned for Wright.
  • After resuming letter correspondence in April, South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un came to an agreement to reestablish communication between their two countries.
  • The man accused of killing eight people at three Atlanta area spas in March pleaded guilty to four of those murders in a deal with Cherokee County prosecutors announced Tuesday. He received four consecutive life sentences plus 35 years—without parole. Fulton County prosecutors had previously planned to seek the death penalty.
  • The U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics team failed to win gold yesterday after star gymnast Simone Biles pulled out of the event midway, saying she was not in the right place mentally to compete. America remains atop the medal count with 30 total medals, but its 10 golds lag behind the 11 each of China and Japan.
  • The United States confirmed 71,129 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 4.6 percent of the 1,541,670 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 458 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 611,409. According to the CDC, 27,802 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19. Meanwhile, 395,489 COVID-19 vaccine doses were administered yesterday, with 188,996,475 Americans having now received at least one dose.

‘Do We Hate Our Political Adversaries More Than We Love Our Country?’

A Capitol Police officer wiping away tears. A D.C. cop slamming his hand on the table in frustration. A Republican lawmaker struggling to speak without sobbing. The Democrat-led January 6 select committee got off to a dramatic start on Tuesday, forcing lawmakers once again to grapple with the events of that day and providing a stark reminder to Republicans that its political salience isn’t fading anytime soon.

The committee’s nine members—and dozens of reporters—crammed into a small hearing room in the Cannon House Office Building yesterday to hear the testimony of four law enforcement officers present at the Capitol on the day of the riot: U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell and Private Harry Dunn, and D.C. Metropolitan Police Department officers Michael Fanone and Daniel Hodges.

“We are not asking for medals, recognition,” Gonell—an immigrant from the Dominican Republic and Iraq War veteran—said, moments after lawmakers played footage of the violent and chaotic scenes of that day. “We simply want justice and accountability. For most people, January 6 happened for a few hours, but for those of us who were in the thick of it, it has not ended. That day continues to be a constant trauma for us literally every day.”

Until yesterday, most of the conversation surrounding the committee had centered on its members. As a reminder, Speaker Nancy Pelosi appointed seven Democrats and two Republicans; Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy withdrew his remaining three appointees after Pelosi blocked Reps. Jim Jordan and Jim Banks from serving. And if Tuesday was any indication, Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson—the chair of the committee—is going to rely heavily on his Republican peers to make his case.

Of Mask Recommendations and Vaccine Mandates

Seventy-five days after telling Americans they could ditch their masks once fully vaccinated, the CDC issued updated guidance on Tuesday encouraging anyone in an “area of substantial or high transmission”—defined as counties with 50 or more new COVID cases per 100,000 residents or greater than 8 percent testing positivity over the past seven days—to start masking indoors again. At present, just over 63 percent of counties meet the criteria nationwide, concentrated in the South and West.

“CDC recommends fully vaccinated people wear masks in public indoor settings to help prevent the spread of the Delta variant and protect others,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky told reporters yesterday, taking care to note the guidance also applies to students, teachers, and staff at K–12 schools. With the Delta variant now responsible for more than 8 in 10 new COVID infections nationwide, confirmed new cases have, by The Dispatch’s count, risen 63 percent week-over-week, and hospitalizations 44 percent. Deaths attributed to the virus, however, have only increased by 6 percent over the same time period.

Walensky justified the about-face by referencing “information” indicating that “in rare occasions, some vaccinated people infected with the Delta variant after vaccination may be contagious and spread the virus to others.” An anonymous administration official, however, told STAT Newsthat public health officials don’t actually have studies proving fully vaccinated people are transmitting the virus—they have studies showing that fully vaccinated people who come down with the Delta variant may infect others because they have a higher amount of virus in their noses and throats.

But public health officials remained adamant yesterday that the vaccines are effective at preventing severe illness, hospitalization, and death—even from the Delta variant. So was yesterday’s guidance for vaccinated individuals more about protecting their unvaccinated countrymen and women? Walensky struggled to answer that question.

“The vast majority of transmission … is occurring through unvaccinated individuals,” she said. “But on that exception that you might have a vaccine breakthrough, we thought it was important for people to understand that they could pass the disease on to someone else.”

Worth Your Time

  • In National Review, Michael Brendan Dougherty lambasts the photography company Kodak, which removed a collection of photographs from its website in order to keep peace with the Chinese government. “What this teaches us is the primacy of the political,” he writes. “Human nature and the laws of economics shape and limit what states can do. But the American state must also be on guard for the ways in which simple greed and the protection of shareholder value can introduce a powerful foreign tyranny into our lives.”

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • Sarah & Co.’s 2024 GOP primary series continued in yesterday’s Sweep, taking a look at a few of the more anti-Trump characters who could feasibly jump in the race: Govs. Larry Hogan and Chris Christie and Rep. Liz Cheney. Plus, Chris Stirewalt has a warning for Democrats about carrying a big-spending message into the midterms.
  • National Review’s Dan McLaughlin stopped by The Remnant yesterday for a conversation with Jonah about the January 6 select committee, the difference between being a political commentator and political operative, and the increasingly fragile state of fusionism on the right.
  • David makes a provocative argument in his latest French Press (🔒): The Supreme Court should not assume that reversing Roe v. Wade will be more disruptive than upholding it. “By returning the abortion question to states, overturning Roe could de-escalate national politics, de-escalate the judicial nomination wars, and perhaps cause voters to focus more on political races closer to home,” he writes. “It’s not as if the case presents the court with a choice between stability and instability. The instability is already here, and it’s been building for almost 50 years.”

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).