DeGette argues rioters believed they were 'invited by the president'
House impeachment manager Rep. Diana DeGette continued to lay out the case against Trump on Thursday and argued how the insurrectionists themselves believed that they were following the president's marching orders.
"They truly believed that the whole intrusion was at the president's orders -- and we know that because they said so," DeGette said. "Many of them actually posed for pictures, bragging about it on social media, and they tagged Mr. Trump in tweets. Folks, this was not a hidden crime. The president told them to be there, and so they actually believed they would face no punishment."
Her main message is that rioters were there, solely, "because the president told them to be."
"The crowd at Donald Trump's speech echoed and chanted his words, and when people in the crowd followed his direction and marched to the Capitol, they chanted the same words as they breached this building," she said. "More and more insurrectionists are admitting that they came at Trump's direction."
DeGette went on to show news reports and video clips of rioters during and following the Jan. 6 attack saying they believed they were acting lawfully and as Trump had requested.
She said rioters would not have been in Washington had they not been invited by the president to falsely "stop the steal" -- and they would not have stormed the Capitol if Trump didn't embolden them to do so.









