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NotedDC — Where the Jan. 6 committee goes next

The Jan. 6 select committee holds its eighth and final scheduled hearing Thursday night, but the panel isn’t ready to rest its case against former President Trump.

Members of the panel have suggested their work isn’t over amid a burgeoning focus on deleted texts from Secret Service members before and on the day of the riot.

“This investigation is not winding down,” Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) said Sunday on CBS News’ ‘Face the Nation.” “We may have more hearings in the future.”

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chair of the panel, told reporters earlier this week the committee plans to release a preliminary report on its year-long investigation this fall, with a final report later in the year.

However, the panel doesn’t appear to be in a rush, as it waits for the Secret Service to recover the text messages under a subpoena.


The panel’s vice chair, Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), also faces a difficult reelection bid in mid-August, injecting another layer of political pressure for a key face of the committee.

Thursday’s prime-time hearing is expected to lay out what Trump did — and, consequently, did not do — after rioters marched to the Capitol on the day of the riot in early 2021.

Members of the panel are looking for a public bookend to material they presented in their first hearing, when they showed what happened inside the building after Trump spoke at a nearby rally and told supporters to “fight like hell.”

An expected three hours of footage and witness testimony is what the panel hopes to use to go out with a bang for its series of hearings, as The Hill’s Niall Stanage writes.

For their part, senators are pursuing bipartisan legislation to prevent another Jan. 6 from happening, our colleague Alex Bolton reports, with proposed reforms to the Electoral Count Act making it explicitly clear that a vice president has no authority to overturn elections.

Welcome to NotedDC: Your guide to politics, policy & people of consequence in D.C.

In today’s issue: Two former White House aides give their view of the Jan. 6 riot. Plus: An A-list celebrity comes to D.C. and a federal marijuana bill makes moves.

🕵🏼‍♀️ Pressure on DOJ expected to build 

Democrats will likely put more pressure on the Department of Justice (DOJ) to charge Trump with a crime after the committee wraps up its public hearings.

Some advocacy groups are already questioning Attorney General Merrick Garland’s position as the hearings near a close, The Hill’s Harper Neidig reports:

From our colleague Rebecca Beitsch: “Legal experts say those fresh lines of inquiry should now be a top priority for law enforcement’s own investigation, as federal prosecutors are best equipped to fill in the gaps of what Congress has uncovered.” 

THURSDAY NIGHT’S WITNESSES

Former Trump White House aides Sarah Matthews and Matthew Pottinger are expected to shed light on what Trump did at the White House during the Capitol riot, following explosive testimony from former aide Cassidy Hutchinson late last month.

Here’s some more on the two witnesses: 

Sarah Matthews 

Read more about Matthews from our colleague Sarakshi Rai.

Matthew Pottinger 

Read more about Pottinger.

For a full preview of Thursday’s hearing, click here.

💨 Congress moves on marijuana bill

Senate Democrats will try to legalize marijuana before the end of the year, introducing a long-awaited bill on the floor Thursday.

Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (N.H.) and Jon Tester (Mont.) previously suggested to Politico that they wouldn’t support the legislation. 

And while legalizing marijuana is a popular issue — a Gallup poll from November found 70 percent of Americans support it — many Republicans aren’t likely to back it.

How it stands in the District: In March, Congress upheld a GOP-supported ban of the sale of marijuana in Washington. Until marijuana is federally legalized, or the ban is lifted, District residents won’t be able to buy or sell it.

Read more from our colleague Aris Folley.

✨ New Kennedy Center honorees

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts has named its honorees for later this year.

Each year, the Kennedy Center hosts its honorees, the president and special guests for a star-studded performance.

Former President Trump didn’t attend or celebrate the show while he was in office, but President Biden resumed attendance in the president’s box last year and also greeted last year’s honorees at the White House in December.  

Hot ticket: Good luck getting an in-person viewing. The Kennedy Center says donors who contribute $10,000 or more annually are eligible to request tickets now. Donors who contribute $700 to $9,999 annually will be invited at a later date if tickets remain.

At a date to be determined, the public is invited to purchase any remaining tickets or be placed on the waitlist. 

A MESSAGE FROM THE HILL

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⚾️ Batter up

Head to Nationals Park on July 28 for the annual Congressional Baseball Game to see your favorite members of Congress slugging it out (in the heat!).

Tickets are still on sale and you can check out this year’s team rosters here.

📺 Hayes to appear on Colbert

If you’re looking for some late night television to watch after the Jan. 6 hearing on Thursday, The Hill’s Judy Kurtz scooped that MSNBC host Chris Hayes will appear on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.” 

More from Kurtz: “It’s hardly the first time that Colbert — a frequent critic of Trump — has opted to go live for his CBS show, rather than air a pre-taped broadcast.” 

Have some news, juicy gossip, insight or other insider info? Send us tips: Elizabeth Crisp and Kelsey Carolan. And encourage friends to sign up here: digital-stage.thehill.com/noted.

We’ll see you next week!

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