[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 19, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Page S53]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                                PROTESTS

  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, before I make my prepared remarks, I would 
like to note the fact that this is the first time that I am returning 
to the floor of the Senate since the events of January 6. It was in the 
early morning hours of January 7 that we concluded our business and 
left this Chamber to return to our homes for the interim period.
  We left, knowing that something terrible had happened in this 
building on January 6, but we didn't know the extent of it. As Members 
of the Senate, we were largely protected from this terrorist 
insurrection, which took place in this building.
  It was about 2:15 p.m. on that afternoon of January 6, when Vice 
President Pence was presiding over the Senate and most of us were in 
our seats, that there was a commotion at the Chair and the Secret 
Service came in and literally pulled the Vice President away from that 
podium and took him out the door. We weren't sure what was happening. 
It all unfolded quickly. There was an effort to make a quorum call to 
determine which Senators were on the floor. It was interrupted when a 
representative of the Capitol Police stood where the Presiding Officer 
is now seated and instructed us to stay in this room, in this Chamber, 
in the Senate, in our chairs. The staff people and surrounding offices 
were going to line the walls. This was going to be a safe place of 
refuge for whatever was going on.
  I remember that moment particularly because something happened, which 
is etched in my memory. Two plain clothes officers came down into the 
well of the Senate and stood there, just a few feet from where I am 
standing. One of them had an automatic weapon around his neck. I 
couldn't imagine what was going on, where, in the U.S. Senate Chamber, 
it was necessary to have that kind of firepower.
  He stayed there for a few minutes, and then we were told to leave and 
leave quickly. We filed out the doors and down the steps and walked 
across through the tunnel to the Hart building, where Members of the 
Senate were safely protected.
  That is one of the reasons I wanted to say a word this afternoon and 
this morning. The Capitol Police, throughout this, were heroic. They 
were overwhelmed by this massive insurrectionist mob. The Capitol 
Police, as well as the others who joined them--the DC Metropolitan 
Police and other law enforcement agencies, which I don't know the names 
of as I stand here--I want to thank them all for literally risking 
their lives for me, for Members of the Senate, for our staff, and 
visitors.
  It wasn't until the next day that we learned--that many of us 
learned--that a Capitol policeman had been killed--killed by this mob. 
My heart goes out to him and his family. I thank him and all of his 
colleagues, men and women, who each day get up in the morning, put on 
their uniforms, and come to this building to protect me and protect the 
other Members of the Senate and the House and all of the staff who work 
here. We will never be able to repay them in any words for what they 
sacrificed and risked on January 6, but let us never, never demean what 
happened that day. It was a terrorist attack--homegrown American 
terrorist attack.
  I know we are going to spend some time discussing who provoked that 
attack. The Republican majority leader laid the blame, as he should 
have, at the feet of the President, who invited this group to 
Washington and then urged them to come march on Capitol Hill. I know we 
will go into this matter with more detail at a later point.
  But the fact of the matter is, we endured a great travesty and a 
great violation of our Republic on that day. To think that in this 
building--this building that we value so much--so many people came in 
hell-bent on death and kidnapping and destroying this great Chamber and 
the building around it. It is inconceivable that this happened in 
America, and we have to come to grips with it in honest, truthful terms 
and not say: Oh, that was yesterday's newspaper, and we have to move 
on.
  But there is good news--good news in light of the bad news that I 
have just recounted. The good news is that by this time tomorrow, we 
will have a new President and a new Vice President of the United 
States.

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