Right-wing Media Offers Sympathy And Excuses For Congress Mob
American conservative media has played down the gravity of the storming of the US Capitol by a mob supporting outgoing President Donald Trump, citing anger at the establishment and accusing the hard left -- without proof -- of having infiltrated the crowd.
Trump supporters broke into Congress as a session was being held Wednesday to certify Joe Biden's November election win, triggering unprecedented chaos and violence at the heart of American democracy, as well as accusations the president was attempting a coup.
Since his defeat, Trump has claimed the election was rigged against him, but has offered no substantive evidence. None of the nearly three dozen lawsuits his campaign has filed challenging the results has been successful.
As well as Fox News, new ultra-conservative outlets battling to nibble market share from the television news behemoth sought to dissociate Trump supporters from the chaos in Congress.
The demonstrators "pushed and shoved but for the most part, that was about it," said Kevin Corke, a Fox News reporter.
"Most of what we saw was beautiful today," said Ben Bergquam, a reporter for the small online channel Real America's Voice, on Wednesday.
Outlets including Real America's Voice, Newsmax and the One America News Network (OAN) -- which Trump has recommended several times in recent weeks -- claimed without any evidence that the crowd had been infiltrated by small ultra-left groups.
"I think they were undercover Antifa," Gina Loudon, presenter for Real America's Voice, said of the rioters she encountered Wednesday in the corridors of the Capitol.
Antifa is a mostly unstructured group of left-wing activists who are frequently denounced as violent troublemakers by Trump and his supporters.
Pat Fallon, a Republican in the House of Representatives, told Newsmax "we don't even know who was on the other side of those doors" among the rioters.
While denouncing the violence committed in the precincts of Congress, Greg Kelly, of Newsmax, said it nonetheless followed a certain logic.
"If you steal an election," he explained, echoing Trump's discredited accusations, "there are going to be a lot of angry people."
"There's a reason this is happening," said Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson. "It is happening because the people with all the power have decided to clamp down so harshly on the population that things explode at a certain point."
For Eric Greitens of Real America's Voice, the forced interruption to debates in Congress Wednesday "gives the president a few more days to demonstrate that there has been fraud."
Others denounced the reaction of the mainstream media.
"They are going to say that all the Trump supporters are violent," said Grant Stinchfield of Newsmax.
"I just wish they would have denounced the fact that so many cities have been damaged" during the spring protests against racism, he added.
With Fox's Sean Hannity in the lead, many commentators highlighted the outgoing president's appeals for calm on Twitter -- though they were launched after the president had urged supporters to march on the Capitol and allowed the situation to escalate.
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