House GOP moves to establish long-delayed Jan. 6 committee
Share and Follow


House Republicans are moving to create a long-delayed select subcommittee to investigate the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack more than six months after it was initially announced.

A resolution to create the subcommittee was filed on Wednesday, GOP leaders tell The Hill, after months of it being put on the backburner and lawmakers hashing out disputes over how much the panel would be authorized to investigate.

Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.), who is leading the effort, got direct support from President Trump in pushing to finally create the committee, The Hill has learned.

It will still be weeks before the committee is established. With the House heading out of town over the August recess, a vote on the resolution to create the select committee is not expected until the chamber returns in September. As a select subcommittee, all the members will be subject to the approval of the Speaker.

The select subcommittee will be tucked under the House Judiciary Committee and chaired by Loudermilk, who led probes into Jan. 6 matters in the last Congress under the banner of the House Administration Committee’s subcommittee on oversight. 

Loudermilk’s previous investigations included the Capitol security posture, as well as the activities of the Democratic-led Jan. 6 committee established after Trump supporters stormed the building in support of his fraud claims.

“House Republicans are proud of our work so far in exposing the false narratives peddled by the politically motivated January 6 Select Committee during the 117th Congress, but there is clearly more work to be done,” Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said in a statement first shared with The Hill. “The resolution introduced today will establish this Select Subcommittee so we can continue our efforts to uncover the full truth that is owed to the American people. House Republicans remain intent on delivering the answers that House Democrats skipped over.”

Loudermilk had secured a commitment to lead a select subcommittee to further investigate Jan. 6 issues in this Congress, and Johnson announced the panel in January.

But months went by and no committee was established, frustrating Loudermilk. Matters from a government shutdown deadline to the crafting of Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” took precedence. 

There were also disputes about what the legislative jurisdiction of the panel would be, with Loudermilk wanting to carry on all the lines of inquiry from his previous probes and being dismayed by the Speaker’s office originally pitching a plan that would limit the jurisdiction to that of the House Judiciary Committee. 

Those jurisdictional issues were resolved, a source told The Hill. The panel has the Judiciary Committee’s broad scope over law enforcement and more when investigating matters related to Jan. 6 as well as a commitment from chairmen from other areas of jurisdiction and the White House to green-light probes into any other lines of inquiry. That could include more investigation into the original Democratic-controlled Jan. 6 panel.

Loudermilk will also have full subpoena power.

The panel will have eight members, three of whom will be members appointed by Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) subject to the Speaker’s approval. It is instructed to release a final report by Dec. 31, 2026.

Loudermilk said in a statement that while his previous probes “uncovered that what happened at the Capitol that day was the result of a series of intelligence, security, and leadership failures at multiple levels within numerous entities,” there is “still much work to be done.”

“It is vital that we continue to uncover the facts and begin the task of making needed reforms to ensure this level of security failure may never happen again,” Loudermilk said.

House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) took a swipe at the previous Democratic-led Jan. 6 committee while commending Loudermilk.

“The partisan January 6 Committee failed to uncover crucial pieces of information for the American people, and Rep. Loudermilk has been the leader in getting to the bottom of the Democrat-run Committee’s failures. Rep. Loudermilk will continue to work tirelessly to get everyone the truth,” Jordan said in a statement.

The Democrats’ previous Jan. 6 panel drew Trump’s ire and its members, which included now-Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), received a preemptive pardon from former President Biden on his last day in office amid threats of prosecution.

House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), who also sat on the original Jan. 6 Committee, painted the effort as a way to distract from the uproar in the GOP over lack of disclosures from the Trump administration relating to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

“Yay, Donald Trump got his way with Speaker Johnson again!” Raskin said as part of a lengthy statement responding to the effort. “I know it’s another desperate and laughable ploy by Trump to change the subject from the Epstein Files, which the whole country will keep demanding until it’s released in full, but I confess that I’m delighted to hear our Republicans colleagues are going to carry out another self-inflicted political wound by creating a nationwide televised opportunity to review their ongoing complicity with, and apologetics for, violent insurrection and Donald Trump’s sinister attempt to overthrow a presidential election which he lost to President Biden by more than 7 million votes, 306-232 in the Electoral College.”

Raskin also called on Johnson to comply with a measure previously approved by the House to hand up a plaque in honor of the police officers who “defended American democracy against Trump’s treachery and violent mob.”

Loudermilk and Jordan both have some personal beef with the original Jan. 6 committee. Jordan refused to comply with a subpoena it issued him, arguing it was not a legitimate inquiry. And the panel asked the Georgia lawmaker to appear voluntarily to explain a tour he gave in the Capitol complex on Jan. 5, 2021 a request he said was meant to push a “false narrative.”

Loudermilk’s previous panel released an “interim report” in December 2024 that recommended a criminal investigation into Cheney, accusing her of witness tampering by being in touch with star hearing witness Cassidy Hutchinson.

Updated at 6:44 p.m. EDT

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
Dodgers strike again! World Series champs land top free agent

Dodgers Secure Top Free Agent, Bolstering World Series Champion Roster

Kyle Tucker is set to join the ranks of Shohei Ohtani and…
Ellen Greenberg's parents reveal last call with daughter's fiancé

Ellen Greenberg’s Parents Share Details from Final Phone Call with Her FiancĂ©

Sandee Greenberg doesn’t recall the precise day she last conversed with her…
Full details of Kyle Tucker’s outrageous Dodgers contract revealed — deferrals and all

Kyle Tucker’s Blockbuster Dodgers Contract Unveiled: Surprising Deferrals and Financial Details

Kyle Tucker is certainly having a banner day, both personally and financially.…
Renee Good was shot four times, including in the head, fire report shows

Fire Report Reveals Renee Good Sustained Multiple Gunshot Wounds, Including Head Injury

Renee Nicole Good, who was tragically shot and killed by a U.S.…
Newsom U-turns on his own X post as he sides with guest on ICE stance

Newsom’s Surprising ICE Stance: A Social Media Reversal Sparks Debate

California Governor Gavin Newsom has recently walked back his previous description of…
Nick Reiner went off rails before parents' murders 'after meds change'

Medication Change Linked to Nick Reiner’s Troubling Behavior Before Parents’ Tragic Deaths

Nick Reiner, son of renowned director Rob Reiner, had been under a…
JSO officer arrested on petty theft charge

Jacksonville Jail Officer Faces Charges for Battery and Witness Tampering After Incident

A Jacksonville correctional officer, Jose Guerra, who has served with the Jacksonville…
Trump is meeting with Venezuelan opposition leader after cozying up to Maduro's successor

Trump Engages with Venezuelan Opposition Leader Following Diplomatic Overtures to Maduro’s Successor

WASHINGTON — On Thursday, Venezuelan opposition figure MarĂ­a Corina Machado met with…