by Daniel Greenfield
  Why couldn’t Congress’ private police force of 2,000 protect it from a mob of hundreds?  
 
 
 
    The Capitol Police have over 2,000 sworn officers. A police force 
dedicated to protecting Capitol Hill has more personnel in its service 
than the police forces of most of the country.
    Congress' private cops are the 19th largest police force in the 
country. It’s a larger force than the police forces of Atlanta, 
Baltimore, Denver, or Milwaukee with a massive $460 million budget.
    It’s the only legislative federal force in the country that is answerable exclusively to Congress.
    While Democrats advocated defunding the police, their private police
 force budget shot up from $375 million in 2016 to $460 million in 2020.
 After the Capitol Hill riot, expect it to go higher.
    Much higher.
    The media claimed that the Capitol Police were overwhelmed by a 
massive riot. Except that the number of violent rioters was, at most, in
 the hundreds, while the Capitol Police could deploy a force the size 
that protects entire cities to protect a few buildings from hundreds of 
people.
    Media narratives have blamed President Trump for not calling out the
 National Guard, but the military should not have been needed to 
supplement a police force as big as those of Atlanta or Denver, but was 
not tied down with an entire city to police, and really only had one 
simple job.
    And it catastrophically failed at that one job.
    When Black Lives Matter rioters, incited by Democrats and the media,
 besieged the White House, 60 members of the Secret Service’s Uniformed 
Division were injured holding the line while President Trump and his 
family were taken to a bunker. 11 members of the Service were 
hospitalized due to the violence of the BLM riot that Democrats falsely 
claimed was peaceful.
    Much of the heavy lifting was done by the Park Police, another one 
of the innumerable mini police forces swarming the city, which has only 
641 sworn officers spread across three cities.
    65 Park Police officers were wounded in the BLM riots and 11 had to be hospitalized.
    This roughly matches the 60 Capitol Police and 58 D.C. cops injured in the Capitol riot.
    Attorney General Barr listed a figure of 150 officers injured in total in the BLM riots in D.C.
    That puts the lie to the false Democrat claim that those riots were peaceful and these weren’t.
    The only objective metric for measuring what is and isn’t a riot is 
the amount of violence involved. Both sets of riots targeted a center of
 government, the White House for BLM and Capitol Hill for the alt-right,
 and the BLM riot was objectively more destructive.
    In the Capitol riot, Brian Sicknick, a pro-Trump veteran, was struck
 on the head, suffered a brain clot and died. During the BLM riots, law 
enforcement officers suffered concussions. None died, but that’s a 
matter of luck, not restraint on the part of BLM thugs using clubs and 
bricks.
    Despite the heavy toll on the injured officers from the Secret 
Service and the Park Police, Democrats and the media falsely accused 
both forces of violently assaulting “peaceful protesters”. Instead of 
condemning the violence which included bricks, bottles, fireworks, and 
bodily fluids being thrown at law enforcement officers, Democrats formed
 a lynch mob.
    Rep. Grijalva demanded that White House fencing come down and that 
the head of the Park Police come down to testify. The Park Police were 
attacked for using tear gas. The Washington Post assailed a Secret Service officer for using mace against a BLM rioter attacking him.
    Unlike the Capitol Police, the Park Police and the Secret Service 
did not kill a single BLM rioter despite provocations and bodily 
injuries. The same can’t be said of Congress’ keystone cops who managed 
to kill an unarmed woman who was not physically assaulting them at the 
time.
    During the BLM riots, Democrats and their media considered mace 
against a violent assailant an overreaction, but think that shooting an 
unarmed woman who was not attacking anyone to be an underreaction 
proving that it’s not about policing, but that leftist lives matters, 
others don’t.
    But the tactical question is why the Capitol rioters got into 
Congress and the BLM rioters never made it inside the White House. 
Intruders have gotten into the White House before, but the Secret 
Service and the Park Police kept the violent racist mob from getting 
through.
    The White House has better security, but the question is why is Congress’ security so bad?
    It’s not for a lack of money or manpower. The Capitol Police force 
is ridiculously huge. It has a massive budget. But it also has virtually
 no oversight except from a corrupt congressional system. The last time 
anyone paid attention to the Capitol Police, they were bungling the Awan investigation under pressure from Congressional Democrats. But that’s what the ‘Caps’ are for.
    The Capitol Police are a patronage force. Things have improved since
 the days when joining meant knowing the right people. But not by that 
much. The level of professionalism of the various D.C. forces is fairly 
low, and the Capitol Police are notorious as the worst of them.
    There’s very little oversight of the Capitol Police whose leadership
 is notorious for ignoring information requests and complaints. The 
massive force answers to Congress and it acts less like a police force 
than as bodyguards for a fairly corrupt organization with no 
accountability.
    But that’s what it is.
    When the FBI raided Rep. William ‘Cold Cash’ Jefferson’s office, 
there was outrage and Rep. Nancy Pelosi signed on to a statement 
demanding that the feds return the papers that they had 
“unconstitutionally” seized from the corrupt Dem’s office. The issue at 
stake was the FBI, which answers to the executive, was not supposed to 
operate on Capitol Hill and on Pelosi’s turf.
    "Not anyone here is above the law," Pelosi argued. But that was 
exactly the point. Congress had its own private police and the FBI was 
not supposed to set foot in her domain.
    Now, Pelosi is complaining that the executive didn’t dispatch a force quickly enough to her aid.
    President Trump, despite false claims by Democrats and the media, 
did not tell anyone to attack Congress. Like Pelosi and other Democrats,
 he supported political protests. The violence began while President 
Trump was giving his speech and had nothing to do with his words.
    It was up to Congress and its private police force to secure the premises and stop the violence.
    The Capitol Police failed badly where the Secret Service and the 
Park Police had prevailed against BLM’s attack on the White House. They 
failed in ways that are baffling and inexcusable.
    The most obvious problem is that some Capitol Police appeared to 
allow many of the protesters inside. Why this happened is a subject of 
heated debate, but the range of possibilities include an environment 
where leftist protesters storming and occupying Capitol Hill had been 
normalized, sympathy by the police, provocation by some higher 
authority, or miscommunication. All of this reflects badly on Congress 
and on its private police force.
    The Capitol Police had the manpower and the budget to secure 
Congress. And there’s no excuse why Congress could not and should not 
have been secured. There was no brilliant strategy here. And the Capitol
 Police, despite being praised as heroes, behaved ineptly and showed no 
coherent plan, some trying to deescalate, while others lashed out 
violently.
    These mixed messages may have been due to the Black Lives Matter 
effect, a successor to the Ferguson Effect, which left many police 
officers afraid to resist criminals for fear of losing their jobs and 
even going to jail. When the White House came under attack, Attorney 
General Barr and national security officials rallied law enforcement 
personnel to make a strong stand.
    When Capitol Hill came under siege, there was no congressional 
leadership to respond to it. Instead of taking command of the situation,
 House members panicked, squabbled, and let their private police flail 
with the situation while they hid away. The sharp contrast between 
President Trump and Attorney General Barr in Lafayette Square, and 
members of Congress waiting for their police force to protect them isn’t
 just ideological. It’s a basic question of crisis leadership.
    Democrats and the media falsely claimed that what happened in 
Lafayette Square was a photo op for which peaceful protesters were 
gassed, but it’s how you show leadership in a riot.
    Congress waited for their private police force to protect them whose
 members knew that whatever happened, they would be blamed for 
overreacting or underreacting to the protest by a leadership that 
doesn’t understand what they do and is sacrificing them to cover its 
asses.
    President Trump, AG Barr, and administration officials gave clear 
orders to federal law enforcement to stand their ground. Administration 
officials then protected officers from the fallout as the same Democrats
 howling for the heads of Capitol rioters were howling for the heads of 
Secret Service and Park Police leaders who were holding back the hordes 
of racist BLM rioters.
    Capitol Police members had no sense that Pelosi or that members of 
Congress were behind them. They were operating in a BLMized law 
enforcement environment in which violent attacks against police and 
timid responses to them by the authorities had been normalized. They had
 no clear orders, they were divided by their own political sympathies 
and by internal politics.
    The Capitol riot should have been just another stressful encounter 
that would have been contained at the expense of injuring some officers 
and rioters without breaching Congress.
    The media has constructed a false narrative in which the White House
 overreacted to BLM and underreacted to the Capitol riot. But it wasn’t 
the White House’s job to protect Congress. That’s why Congress has a 
force of 2,300 people and a $460 million budget with just one job to do.
    The question of why it failed at that job ought to be directed to Pelosi and congressional leaders.
    The Capitol riot is Pelosi’s disaster and she’s making the most of 
it by blaming it on everyone else. Her private police force had the 
resources and the people to keep out the Visigoths, never mind a few 
hundred people, and instead turned what should have been a riot into a 
disaster.
    Whether that was intentional or not is a question that pits Hanlon’s
 Razor “never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by 
stupidity” against Washington D.C. cynicism.
    But there is little question that Speaker Pelosi and the Democrats 
have massively profited from their mismanagement, initiating proposals 
to impeach President Trump, expel legislators, purge Republicans from 
social media platforms, and to cut off corporate donations to them.
    While the media propaganda blares non-stop, heads are quietly 
rolling at the Capitol Police, but don’t expect that to do anything 
except lower morale and water down the force even further.
    Meanwhile the party of police defunding will see to it that the 
Capitol Police budget tops those of most major cities, that its ranks 
continue to swell, and that it remains as incompetent as ever.
    And then the next disaster in Congress will also be blamed on someone who isn’t in Congress.
    Why couldn’t Congress’ private police force of 2,000 protect it from
 a mob of hundreds? Don’t ask Congress. Just pay the $460 million, cry 
over the headlines, and keep your mouth shut.
 
Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is an investigative journalist and writer focusing on the radical Left and Islamic terrorism.
 
Source: https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2021/01/capitol-hill-riot-was-pelosis-fault-not-trumps-daniel-greenfield/ 
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