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Trump pledges 'orderly' transition as Congress affirms Biden victory

President Donald Trump for the first time acknowledged his defeat in the November 3 election and announced there would be an "orderly transition on January 20th" after Congress concluded the electoral vote count early Thursday certifying President-elect Joe Biden's victory.

Trump's acknowledgement came after a day of chaos and destruction on Capitol Hill as a mob of his supporters stormed the Capitol building and unleashed unprecedented scenes of mayhem as it tried to halt the peaceful transition of power. Members of Congress were forced into hiding, offices were ransacked, and the formal congressional tally halted for more than six hours.

"Even though I totally disagree with the outcome of the election, and the facts bear me out, nevertheless there will be an orderly transition on January 20th," Trump said in a statement posted to Twitter by his social media director. His own account had been locked by the company for posting messages that appeared to justify the assault on the seat of the nation's democracy.

ANALYSIS: The two-word dilemma the Republican Party now faces

Trump added, "While this represents the end of the greatest first term in presidential history, it's only the beginning of our fight to Make America Great Again!"

The statement was the first time Trump formally acknowledged his loss after spending the last two months refusing to concede and lobbing baseless alleging of widespread voter fraud, even though his own Justice Department, federal courts and state governments have said repeatedly the vote was carried out freely and fairly.

Trump's refusal to accept reality and his incendiary rhetoric reached a breaking point Wednesday when his supporters violently occupied the Capitol in one of the most jarring scenes ever to unfold in a seat of American political power. Authorities said four people died during the violence, including one woman who was shot by an officer outside the House chamber.

Trump had encouraged his supporters to march on the Capitol to protest lawmakers' actions, and later appeared to excuse the violent occupation by the mob, which forced its way inside and clashed with police.

"These are the things and events that happen when a sacred landslide election victory is so unceremoniously & viciously stripped away from great patriots who have been badly & unfairly treated for so long," Trump wrote in a message that was later deleted by Twitter. He added, "Go home with love & in peace. Remember this day forever!"

READ MORE: Angry Republicans call for Trump impeachment after Capitol Hill riots

https://twitter.com/DanScavino/status/1347103015493361664?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet

Trump's response to the violence underscored his monthslong obsession with trying to overturn the results of the election. He has spent the final days of his presidency angrily stewing and lashing out at Republicans for perceived disloyalty while refusing to acknowledge his loss or concede.

Trump's statement could not be posted on his Twitter or Facebook feeds because both accounts had been blocked from posting.

Trump spent much of Wednesday afternoon watching the insurrection on television from his private dining room off the Oval Office. But aside from sparing appeals for calm issued at the insistence of his staff, he was largely disengaged. Instead, a White House official said, most of Trump's attention was consumed by his ire at Vice President Mike Pence, who defied Trump's demands by acknowledging he did not have the power to uniliterally choose the next president. The official was not authorised to discuss the matter and spoke only on the condition of anonymity.

READ MORE: Stream of White House staff quit after riot chaos

Trump only reluctantly issued the tweets and taped a video encouraging an end to the violence. The posts came at the insistence of staff and amid mounting criticism from Republican lawmakers urging him to condemn the violence being perpetrated in his name, according to the official.

And even as authorities struggled to take control of Capitol Hill after protesters overwhelmed police, Trump continued to level baseless allegations of mass voter fraud and praised his loyalists as "very special."

"I know your pain. I know your hurt. But you have to go home now," he said in a video posted more than 90 minutes after lawmakers were evacuated from the House and Senate chambers. "We can't play into the hands of these people. We have to have peace. So go home. We love you. You're very special."

The violence, coupled with the president's tepid response, alarmed many in the White House and appeared to push Republicans allies to the breaking point after years of allegiance to Trump. After four years with no shortage of fraught moments, Wednesday's events quickly emerged as the nadir of morale in the Trump White House, as aides looked on in horror at the chaos at the Capitol Trump had fomented.

READ MORE: Twitter and Facebook block Donald Trump in wake of US Capitol riots

A number of White House aides were discussing a potential mass resignation, according to people familiar with the conversation. And others quickly departed.

Stephanie Grisham, the first lady's chief of staff and a former White House press secretary, submitted her resignation Wednesday. Deputy national security adviser Matt Pottinger, White House social secretary Rickie Niceta and deputy press secretary Sarah Matthews also resigned, according to officials. More departures were expected in the coming days, officials said.

Other aides indicated they planned to stay to help smooth the transition to the Biden administration. And some harboured concerns about what Trump might do in his final two weeks in office if they were not there to serve as guardrails when so few remain.

Trump's begrudging statement acknowledging defeat came after even longtime allies floated whether members of his Cabinet should invoke the 25th Amendment and remove him from office. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie told ABC late Wednesday that "responsible members of the Cabinet" should be thinking about fulfilling their oath of office, adding that Trump had "violated his oath and betrayed the American people."

Trump has been single-mindedly focused on his electoral defeat since Election Day, aides said, at the expense of the other responsibilities of his office, including the fight against the raging coronavirus. Indeed, it was Pence, not Trump, who spoke with the acting defence secretary to discuss mobilising the DC National Guard on Wednesday afternoon.

Hours earlier, Trump had appeared at a massive rally near the White House, where he continued to urge supporters to fight the election results and encouraged them to march to the Capitol in remarks that were peppered with incendiary language and rife with violent undertones. At one point, he even suggested he might join them — a prospect that was discussed by the White House but eventually abandoned.

"We're going to the Capitol," he said. "We're going to try and give our Republicans … the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country."

Earlier in the rally, his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, had advocated what he had called "trial by combat."

As the violence raged, Republican lawmakers and former administration officials had begged Trump to tell his supporters to stand down.

Biden Confirmed by Congress After Deadly Capitol Riot

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Hours after hundreds of President Donald Trump’s supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol in a harrowing assault on American democracy, a shaken Congress on Thursday formally certified Democrat Joe Biden’s election victory.

Immediately afterward, the White House released a statement from Trump in which he pledged an “orderly transition” when Biden is sworn into office on Jan. 20, although he repeated his false claim that he won the November election. On Wednesday, the Republican president had seemingly encouraged his followers to swarm the Capitol.

Congress resumed its work certifying Biden’s Electoral College win late in the evening after the chaotic scenes on Capitol Hill. After a debate stretching into the early hours of Thursday, the Senate and the House of Representatives rejected two objections to the tally and certified the final Electoral College vote with Biden receiving 306 votes and Trump 232 votes.

Vice President Mike Pence, in declaring the final vote totals, said this “shall be deemed a sufficient declaration of the persons elected president and vice president of the United States.”

Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will take office alongside Biden.

The outcome of the certification proceedings had never been in doubt, but was interrupted by rioters who forced their way past metal security barricades, broke windows and scaled walls to fight their way into the Capitol.

Police said four people died during the chaos – one from gunshot wounds and three from medical emergencies – and 52 people were arrested.

Some besieged the House chamber while lawmakers were inside, banging on its doors and forcing suspension of the certification debate. Security officers piled furniture against the chamber’s door and drew their pistols before helping lawmakers and others escape.

The assault on the Capitol was the culmination of months of divisive and escalating rhetoric around the Nov. 3 election, with Trump repeatedly making false claims that the vote was rigged and urging his supporters to help him overturn his loss

Following Thursday’s certification by Congress, he issued a statement via White House aide Dan Scavino, saying:

“Even though I totally disagree with the outcome of the election, and the facts bear me out, nevertheless there will be an orderly transition on January 20th.”

Wednesday’s chaos unfolded after Trump – who before the election refused to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he lost – addressed thousands of supporters near the White House and told them to march on the Capitol to express their anger at lawmakers.

He told supporters to pressure their elected officials to reject the results, urging them “to fight.”

Some prominent Republicans in Congress put the blame for the day’s violence squarely on his shoulders.

“There is no question that the President formed the mob, the President incited the mob, the President addressed the mob. He lit the flame,” House Republican Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney said on Twitter.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who had long remained silent while Trump sought to overturn the election result, called the invasion a “failed insurrection” and referred to those who had stormed the Capitol as “unhinged.”

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US:Talk of Booting Trump Out Before Jan. 20

(CNN) After violent pro-Trump protesters stormed the US Capitol on Wednesday, a growing number of Republican leaders and Cabinet officials told CNN that they believe Donald Trump should be removed from office before January 20. Four of them called for the 25th Amendment to be invoked, and two others said the President should be impeached.

“He has to be impeached and removed,” said one current Republican elected official.

A former senior official said the President’s actions were egregious enough to remove him even with such a short time left in his tenure.

“I think this has been a huge shock to the system,” said the former official. “How do you keep him in place for two weeks after this?” 

By impeaching and removing Trump, even at this late stage of his term, the Senate could subsequently vote to disqualify Trump from ever holding federal office again. #

On the other hand, invoking the 25th Amendment would require Vice President Mike Pence and a majority of the Cabinet to vote to remove Trump from office due to his inability to “discharge the powers and duties of his office” — an unprecedented step.

Some Cabinet members are holding preliminary discussions about invoking the 25th Amendment, a well-placed GOP source told CNN.

The discussions are ongoing but it’s unclear if there will be enough Cabinet members to result in Trump’s removal. The conversations have reached Capitol Hill where some senators have been made aware of the discussions, the source said.

Within minutes of protestors breaching the Capitol on Wednesday afternoon, Republicans were revisiting the idea of removing Trump from office, a choice that nearly all of them passed on making a year ago during last year’s impeachment trial.

The forceful denunciations of Trump are also unprecedented. Former President George W. Bush, who has kept a low profile, released a strongly-worded rebuke Wednesday evening calling the “insurrection” at the Capitol a “sickening and heartbreaking sight.” While not mentioning Trump by name, Bush said he was “appalled by the reckless behavior of some political leaders since the election and by the lack of respect shown today for our institutions, our traditions, and our law enforcement.”

Mitt Romney, the Utah senator who was the only Republican to vote to convict the President on an article of impeachment last year, went further, calling the President a “selfish man” who “deliberately misinformed his supporters” about the election. Romney also called the attack on the Capitol an “insurrection” and blamed Trump, saying he “stirred [supporters] to action this very morning.”

Wyoming Republican Rep. Liz Cheney, a member of the House leadership, echoed Romney’s anger and frustration at Trump. “There is no question that the President formed the mob. The President incited mob, the President addressed the mob,” said Cheney on Fox News. “He lit the flame.”

And Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, an otherwise staunch ally of Trump’s, was unsparing. “It’s past time for the president to accept the results of the election, quit misleading the American people, and repudiate mob violence,” Cotton said.

Other Republicans on Capitol Hill were furious as well with the President.

“The President needs to call it off,” Rep. Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin told CNN’s Jake Tapper. “Call it off! It’s over. The election is over.”

Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois dismissed Trump’s Wednesday afternoon tweet asking rioters at the Capitol to “remain peaceful.”

“That’s cowardice,” Kinzinger told Tapper. “He needs to stand up and say, I lost the election, let the count go ahead.”

But as Trump seems unlikely to make those concessions, two longtime Republican activists and allies of the White House said the President must go.

“Pence should move against him on the 25th Amendment,” said one.

“They need to invoke the 25th Amendment immediately,” said the other.

 

 

The post Biden Confirmed by Congress After Deadly Capitol Riot appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

Queensland's new COVID restrictions

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk has ordered new restrictions and an urgent contact-tracing operation is underway after it was confirmed a quarantine hotel worker who tested positive to coronavirus has contracted the virulent UK strain of the virus.

Urgent genome testing revealed tonight the woman — employed as a casual cleaner at the Hotel Grand Chancellor in Brisbane — has the mutation of coronavirus that has accelerated a crisis in the UK and prompted Britain's third lockdown.

The result has sparked concerns Queensland may face a major outbreak as the woman caught public transport and went shopping before she developed symptoms and got tested yesterday.

LIVE UPDATES: Congress affirms Biden victory, Trump pledges transition of power

Ms Palaszczuk said restrictions immediately apply to people in the Metro North, Metro South and West Moreton Hospital and Health Service regions:

  • No visitors to aged care
  • No visitors to hospitals
  • No visitors to disability accommodation
  • No visitors to prisons or youth detention centres

Race to find source of infection, other cases

It is unclear exactly how the cleaner contracted the virus, but a child returning from the UK was one of Queensland's cases in hotel quarantine today.

The woman lives in Algester in Brisbane's south.

"This cleaner did everything right," Ms Palaszczuk said earlier.

"She developed the symptoms yesterday and was tested yesterday."

Queensland Health will ban visits to hospitals and aged care facilities in Brisbane, Logan and Ipswich.

https://twitter.com/AnnastaciaMP/status/1347105507840905219

The premier urged anyone in Queensland who has any symptom to get tested immediately.

"The key messages are if you are sick, please go and get tested," she said.

"We want all of our community to be safe in Queensland."

Dr Young said work is underway to trace the woman's movements.

"We have been working with her through the night and she has been fantastic and cooperated fully with us," Dr Young said.

"So we have been working through with her where she has been during her infectious period."

"She did one shift at the Grand Chancellor on the 2nd of January so we've been working with the hotel who have been very, very helpful with anyone who's been in that hotel to make sure we've covered all bases there," Dr Young said.

"We've then spoken to her about where she has been in the community since then."

Anyone who was in these locations at these times is being urged to get tested and isolate immediately.

https://twitter.com/qldhealthnews/status/1347008072003174407

The woman caught a train from Altandi Station to Roma Street at 7am on Saturday 2 January.

The woman caught a train from Central Station to Altandi Station at 4pm on Saturday 2 January

Woolworths, Calamvale North from 11am to 12pm on Sunday January 3.

Coles, Sunnybank Hills from 7.30am to 8am on Tuesday 5 January.

Newsagency, Sunnybank Hills Shopping Town from 8am to 8.15am 5 January.

Dr Young said its likely more locations will be added to the list as more of the woman's contacts are traced.

https://twitter.com/AnnastaciaMP/status/1346994615862194177

Residents in the Sunnybank Hills, Algester and Calamvale are also being urged to come forward and get tested.

Queensland Health is adding more testing sites and increasing hours at clinics.

The locations and updated times will be listed on the Queensland Government Coronavirus website.

More than 15,000 tests were conducted in the last 24-hour period.

Deadly Insurrection Finally Forces Trump to Admit Defeat

It took a mob insurrection and sacking of the US Capitol building, but President Donald Trump has finally acknowledged the end of his presidency Thursday morning saying there would be an “orderly transition of power” on Jan. 20 just minutes after Congress formally certified the Electoral College votes in favor of President-elect Joe Biden.

Trump’s statement was shared through the Twitter account of White House aide and social media director Dan Scavino. Facebook and Twitter temporarily suspended Trump from his social media accounts after he posted about a pro-Trump mob that overran the Capitol on Wednesday that ran afoul of platform guidelines.

“Even though I totally disagree with the outcome of the election, and the facts bear me out, nevertheless there will be an orderly transition on January 20th. I have always said we would continue our… fight to ensure that only legal votes were counted. While this represents the end of the greatest first term in presidential history, it’s only the beginning of our fight to Make America Great Again!”

The message by Trump via Scavino came just before 4 a.m. on Thursday, minutes after congressional lawmakers formally tabulated the Electoral College votes. The certification dragged into the early morning hours after the process was interrupted just an hour into debate on Wednesday afternoon when Trump supporters breached the Capitol, resulting in both the House and Senate chambers having to gavel out.

Earlier in the day, Trump told the crowd of supporters he would “never concede,” instead insisting as he has for almost two months that the election was stolen from him through coordinated and widespread fraud — claims that neither he nor his lawyers have proved.

“Make no mistake — this election was stolen from you, from me and from the country,” Trump told supporters.

The breach of the Capitol prompted a host of lawmakers, and Democratic and Republican former U.S. presidents, to call on Trump to commit to a peaceful transfer of power. Sen. Tom Cotton (R- Ark.) said in a statement Trump should “quit misleading the American people.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who has aligned himself closely with Trump, said in a fiery floor speech late Wednesday that he had tried to support the president but “enough is enough.”

“Trump and I, we had a hell of a journey. I hate it being this way. … All I can say is count me out. Enough is enough. … We’ve got to end it,” Graham said.


DC Riots the Culmination of Trump Vote Fraud Claims

Guardian (UK) The riots at the US Capitol shocked many in the US and around the world, but for some, the violent scenes in Washington are simply the natural culmination of Donald Trump’s baseless claims of voter fraud and repeated stoking of division in the US.

The descent by thousands of Trump supporters on the Capitol – minutes after the president specifically asked them to march towards it – might be the clearest evidence yet of Trump’s responsibility for Wednesday’s debacle.

But in truth, the violent insurrection was a long time coming.

Months before the November election took place, Trump supporters were already being fed a steady diet of misinformation, as Trump repeatedly claimed the only way he could lose was if the election was rigged.

Should that happen, Trump and his allies told supporters, the US would descend into socialism, communism, or worse. In August he told a crowd that if Biden were to win the election, “China will own the United States” – to the extent that Americans would “have to learn to speak Chinese”.

As the world watched the mob of Trump supporters lay siege to the Capitol building, the beacon of American democracy, it clear to some that this had been a long time coming.

“What we are witnessing at this moment is the manifestation and culmination of reckless leadership, a pervasive misuse of power, and anarchy,” Derrick Johnson, the president of the NAACP civil rights organization, said in a statement.

“This is not protesting or activism; this is an insurrection, an assault on our democracy and a coup incited by President Trump.

“For the past four years, we’ve seen him chip away at the civility, integrity and dignity of our nation. The pattern of President Trump’s misconduct is unmistakable and has proven time and time again that it is a grave threat and harm to the fragile fabric of our country.”

Johnson and others called for Trump to be impeached for his role in the siege of the Capitol. Some Democratic members of Congress have already said they support that measure, and Ilhan Omar, a progressive congresswoman from Minnesota, said on Wednesday evening she was already drawing up articles of impeachment.

The tone at Trump’s rally before the riot was combative, as the president told the crowd: “You’ll never take back our country with weakness. You have to show strength and you have to be strong.” Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s confidante and increasingly beleagured lawyer, had earlier demanded “trial by combat” over the election results, further stoking the crowd.

Away from Trump’s immediate circle however, many elected Republicans have also lent credence to the president’s baseless accusations of fraud – and have supported Trump even as he defended far-right, torch-bearing marchers in Charlottesville, refused to condemn white supremacy, and spread fear among Black Americans.

“Make no mistake: the domestic terrorism at the US Capitol by armed protesters is not only Trump’s fault alone,” Julian Castro, a Democratic former secretary of housing and urban development and 2020 presidential candidate, wrote on Twitter.

“This is the result of leaders in the Republican party fueling conspiracy, division and hatred for years. And it won’t be fixed until they lose their office.”

The Democratic senator Tammy Duckworth, who was on her way to speak on the Senate floor when Trump supporters besieged the Capitol, had no doubt who was responsible.

“The [one to] blame for this is Donald Trump. He is the one that has been spreading conspiracy theories, falsehoods,” Duckworth said in an interview with CBS News.

“He is the one that is rejecting the results of this election which has been certified by all 50 governors, it is this president who has incited his supporters to this violence.”

 
A member of a pro-Trump mob shatters a window inside the Capitol after breaking into the building. Photograph: Jon Cherry/Getty Images

The Republican senator Mitt Romney, who has frequently served as a fly in Trump’s ointment, was among the relatively few GOP members to directly link Trump to the violent uprising, as Romney described the storming of the Capitol as “an insurrection, incited by the president of the United States”.

Many others remained silent, as Trump himself refused to criticize those attacking the Capitol, instead posting a mixed-message video where he asked supporters to go home, but also praised those supporters and repeated baseless accusations that the election was “stolen”.

Facebook, YouTube and Twitter removed the video amid concerns it could inflame the situation further.

“We are witnessing one of the greatest assaults on our democracy since the civil war,” Richard Trumka, the president of the AFL-CIO, the largest federation of labor unions in the US, said.

“Today’s attempted coup has been years in the making as Donald Trump consistently spews venom, conspiracies, hate and lies to his supporters. They are carrying out his wishes, and far too many Republican lawmakers have enabled and even encouraged this violent threat to our republic.

“This is an effort to violate the constitutional rights of every law-abiding American and the labor movement will not stand for it. Not today. Not ever.”

The post Deadly Insurrection Finally Forces Trump to Admit Defeat appeared first on The St Kitts Nevis Observer.

What's next for the Republican Party?

Tonight, the focus should be on the Republican Party.

It's long been the North Star for conservatives around the world, including here in Australia.

It's the party of Reagan, Eisenhower, Abe Lincoln.

https://twitter.com/9NewsAUS/status/1347084844501708800?s=20

The party of policy that traded all of that five years ago for personality and three-word slogans.

Remember "build the wall", "drain the swamp", "lock her up"?

Well the wall isn't built, the swamp isn't drained, and it's Donald Trump's friends in prison tonight, not Hillary Clinton.

All the while, the President trashed, often one tweet at a time, the very institutions, establishments and alliances that helped make not only America great, but Australia great as well.

The crowd cheers as U. President Donald Trump waves at the end of a 'Make America Great Again' campaign rally at Williamsport Regional Airport, in Montoursville, Pennsylvania

But that's the president.

Donald Trump is who he has always been.

Republicans are who they chose to become and having hitched so much of the party to the Trump Train, they've lost the presidency, they've lost the House, today they lost the Senate.

And after watching a day of violence in the President's name, tonight, instead of chanting those three word slogans they are pondering a two word dilemma: Now what?

Angry Republicans call for Trump impeachment after Capitol Hill riots

A growing number of Republican leaders and Cabinet officials now believe Donald Trump should be removed from office before January 20.

Four of them called for the 25th Amendment to be invoked, and two others said the President should be impeached.

"He has to be impeached and removed," one Republican elected official told CNN.

LIVE UPDATES: House rejects objection to Pennsylvania electoral votes

Donald Trump

READ MORE: Stream of White House staff quit after riot chaos

A former senior official said the President's actions were egregious enough to remove him even with such a short time left in his tenure.

"I think this has been a huge shock to the system," said the former official.

"How do you keep him in place for two weeks after this?"

By impeaching and removing Trump, even at this late stage of his term, the Senate could subsequently vote to disqualify Trump from ever holding federal office again.

On the other hand, invoking the 25th Amendment would require Vice President Mike Pence and a majority of the Cabinet to vote to remove Trump from office due to his inability to "discharge the powers and duties of his office" – an unprecedented step.

READ MORE: Twitter and Facebook block Donald Trump in wake of US Capitol riots

Supporters of President Donald Trump climb the West wall of the the US Capitol.

Some Cabinet members are holding preliminary discussions about invoking the 25th Amendment, a well-placed GOP source told CNN.

The discussions are ongoing but it's unclear if there will be enough Cabinet members to result in Trump's removal.

The conversations have reached Capitol Hill, where some senators have been made aware of the discussions, the source said.

READ MORE: Obama condemns 'violence incited by Donald Trump'

Within minutes of protestors breaching the Capitol this afternoon, Republicans were revisiting the idea of removing Trump from office, a choice that nearly all of them passed on making a year ago during last year's impeachment trial.

The forceful denunciations of Trump are also unprecedented.

Former President George W. Bush, who has kept a low profile, released a strongly-worded rebuke Wednesday evening calling the "insurrection" at the Capitol a "sickening and heartbreaking sight."

https://twitter.com/TheBushCenter/status/1346963094409539591

Mitt Romney, the Utah senator who was the only Republican to vote to convict the President on an article of impeachment last year, went further, calling the President a "selfish man" who "deliberately misinformed his supporters" about the election.

Romney also called the attack on the Capitol an "insurrection" and blamed Trump, saying he "stirred [supporters] to action this very morning."

Trump supporters harass media and smash cameras during Washington protest

Supporters of Donald Trump have harassed members of the media and smashed cameras during protests in Washington.

A number of journalists were forced to abandon their equipment in a set-up area after violent thugs forced their way in.

The angry mob was caught on camera kicking over lights and battering expensive cameras with sticks and flags.

READ MORE: Vote objecting to Biden's Arizona victory fails in landslide

9News US Correspondent Amelia Adams witnessed the chaos while reporting from the city.

"We were constantly harassed and abused and some of our colleagues really came under attack," she said.

"The Associated Press had all of their camera gear smashed and destroyed."

READ MORE: Death toll of US Capitol riot grows to four

Protesters stormed the Capitol as lawmakers held Joint Session to certify the Electoral College count of the presidential election.

Four protesters were killed during the violence.