Follow the money to find the funders of the insurrection
BRETT WILKINS for Common Dreams
assault on the U.S. Capitol with a protracted effort by secretive right-wing groups and wealthy GOP contributors, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse on Friday called for investigating dark money organizations and influential donors who allegedly organized and funded the deadly attack in a failed bid to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.
"The attack on the Capitol on January 6 was the culmination of a months long disinformation campaign designed to allow President [Donald] Trump to remain in office," Whitehouse (D-R.I.) wrote in a letter (pdf) to Sen. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chair of the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, also known as the commission.
"Public reporting indicates that this campaign was organized and funded by dark money organizations and powerful donors, and aided and abetted by members of Congress and the Trump administration," he continued.
Whitehouse urged the commission to "examine the funders and organizers whose efforts may have laid the groundwork for the violence that day."
The January 6
"March to Save America" rally in Washington, D.C. that immediately
preceded the storming of
the Capitol by Trump supporters seeking to thwart Congress' certification of
President Joe Biden's Electoral College victory was reportedly organized and
encouraged by a web of dark money groups. These organizations, whose rise was aided by
the U.S. Supreme Court's 2010 Citizens
United v. Federal Election Commission ruling, do not have to publicly
disclose their donors.
Dark money
groups linked to the January 6 rally include Women
for America First; America First Policies; and Rule of Law
Defense Fund (RLDF), an arm of the Republican Attorneys
General Association (RAGA) that sent out
robocalls urging Trump supporters to "stop the
steal"—a baseless slogan referring to the so-called "Big Lie"
that the 2020 presidential election was fraudulent.
"Many of
these same groups were involved in planning and organizing President Trump's
'Save America Rally' on January 6," Whitehouse wrote in his letter.
"These groups obtained permits, provided funding and equipment, and
actively recruited participants."
Who is behind these groups?
As Documented reported shortly
after the Capitol attack, "RLDF has received at least $175,000 from the
Koch-backed Freedom Partners. Other RLDF donors include Judicial Crisis
Network, the Rule of Law Project, and the Edison Electric Institute."
As for RAGA, its
donors in 2020 included Koch
Industries ($375,000), Comcast Corporation ($200,000), Walmart ($140,000), Home
Depot ($125,000), Amazon ($100,000), TikTok ($75,000), 1-800 Contacts
($51,000), Chevron ($50,000), The National Rifle Association ($50,000),
Facebook ($50,000), Fox Corporation ($50,000), Uber ($50,000), Coca Cola
($50,000), ExxonMobil ($50,000), and Google ($25,000).
Whitehouse wrote that "there is evidence that members of Congress were also involved in orchestrating the 'Save America Rally.' Three members of the House of Representatives have been identified as alleged co-architects: Reps. Andy Biggs [R-Ariz.], Paul Gosar [R-Ariz.], and Mo Brooks [R-Ala.]."
"These representatives coordinated with other congressmen to object to the electoral count that day," Whitehouse continued. "It is unclear to what extent those other members were also aware of or involved in the plans for the rally."
"Clearly,
it was in the interests of the attackers to have members keep the balloting
open," the senator added, "and I have asked the Senate Ethics
Committee to examine whether there was coordination—direct or indirect—between
Senate objectors and those involved in the attack on the Capitol."
One hundred and
thirty-eight House Republicans and seven GOP senators voted on
January 6 in favor of rejecting electoral votes from Arizona and Pennsylvania,
battleground states that Biden won. In January, Whitehouse led a Senate Ethics
Committee complaint (pdf)
accusing Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), and other "Big
Lie" backers of possible conspiracy, aiding and abetting, and other
potential crimes in connection with the January 6 attack. The Ethics Committee
has not yet issued any findings in response to the complaint.
"In order
to fully understand what happened on January 6, the commission should further
investigate the role these dark money groups played in propagating President
Trump's misinformation campaign and in orchestrating the 'Save America
Rally,'" Whitehouse's letter concludes. "The commission should also
examine the extent of any coordination between those groups, the Trump
administration, and the members of Congress who objected to the electoral
count."