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The Jan. 6 riot, four years on.

A man in a Stars and Stripes shirt and cap holds up what appears to be a sign (if so, the writing faces away from the camera). The United States Capitol is in the background.
A participant in a September 2021 rally in Washington, organized to support people who faced charges in connection with the Jan. 6 riot. Kenny Holston for The New York Times

Four years ago today, protesters stormed the U.S. Capitol with clubs, chemical irritants and other weapons, inflamed by Donald Trump’s lie that the 2020 election had been stolen from him.

Several people died during and after the riot, including one protester by gunshot and four police officers by suicide. More than 140 officers were injured. After the attack, Trump’s political career seemed to be over, but in two weeks he will take the oath of office again.

He and his supporters have devoted considerable effort to reinventing the events of that day. They have spread conspiracy theories to their ultimate political gain. As his allies in Congress and the media downplayed the attack and redirected blame, violent rioters — prosecuted, convicted and imprisoned — were turned into patriotic martyrs.

Trump’s return to the White House will give him the power to further sanitize what he has called “a day of love.” He has vowed to pardon rioters in the first hour of his new administration, and his congressional supporters are pushing for criminal charges against those who investigated his actions.

Read how Trump inverted a violent day and turned it into political capital.

Analysis: Trump refers to the U.S. as ravaged by crisis, calling it a desolate hellscape of crime, chaos and economic hardship. The numbers tell a very different story.

Legal troubles: Trump may not face a penalty for his conviction in his hush-money case, but he could still be the first felon to be president.

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