Biden is giving the second highest civilian award to the leaders of the
Jan. 6 congressional panel
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[January 02, 2025]
By COLLEEN LONG
President Joe Biden is bestowing the second highest civilian medal on
Liz Cheney and Bennie Thompson — the lawmakers who led the congressional
investigation into the violent Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot by Donald
Trump's supporters, and who Trump has said should be jailed.
Biden will award the Presidential Citizens Medal to 20 people in a
ceremony Thursday at the White House, including Americans who fought for
marriage equality, a pioneer in treating wounded soldiers, and two of
the president's longtime friends, former Sens. Ted Kaufman, D-Del., and
Chris Dodd, D-Conn.
“President Biden believes these Americans are bonded by their common
decency and commitment to serving others,” the White House said in a
statement. “The country is better because of their dedication and
sacrifice.”
Biden last year honored people who were involved in defending the
Capitol from the rioters, or who helped safeguard the will of American
voters during the 2020 presidential election, when Trump tried and
failed to overturn the results.
Cheney, who was a Republican representative from Wyoming, and Thompson,
a Mississippi Democrat, led the House committee that probed the
insurrection. Cheney later said she would vote for Democratic Vice
President Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential race even campaigned
with her, raising Trump's ire. Biden has been considering whether to
offer preemptive pardons to Cheney and others Trump has targeted.
Trump, who won the 2024 election and will take office Jan. 20, still
refuses to back away from his lies about the 2020 presidential race and
has said he would pardon the rioters once he takes office.
During an interview with NBC's “Meet the Press,” Trump said, “Cheney did
something that’s inexcusable, along with Thompson and the people on the
un-select committee of political thugs and, you know, creeps," claiming
without evidence they “deleted and destroyed” testimony they collected.
“Honestly, they should go to jail,” he said.
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President Joe Biden makes a statement on the latest developments in
New Orleans from Camp David, Md., Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025. (AP
Photo/Susan Walsh)
Biden is also giving the award to attorney Mary Bonauto, who fought
to legalize same-sex marriage, and Evan Wolfson, a leader of the
marriage equality movement.
Other honorees include Frank Butler, who set new standards for using
tourniquets on war injuries; Diane Carlson Evans, an Army nurse
during the Vietnam War who founded the Vietnam Women’s Memorial
Foundation; and Eleanor Smeal, an activist who led women's rights
protests in the 1970s and fought for equal pay.
He's also giving the award to photographer Bobby Sager, academics
Thomas Vallely and Paula Wallace, and Frances Visco, the president
of the National Breast Cancer Coalition.
Other former lawmakers being honored include former Sen. Bill
Bradley, D-N.J.; former Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, the first woman to
represent Kansas; and former Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., who
championed gun safety measures after her son and husband were shot
to death.
Biden will honor four people posthumously: Joseph Galloway, a former
war correspondent who wrote about the first major battle in Vietnam
in the book “We Were Soldiers Once … and Young"; civil rights
advocate and attorney Louis Lorenzo Redding; former Delaware state
judge Collins Seitz; and Mitsuye Endo Tsutsumi, who was held with
other Japanese Americans during World War II and challenged the
detention.
The Presidential Citizens Medal, created by President Richard Nixon
in 1969, is the country’s second highest civilian honor after the
Presidential Medal of Freedom. It is awarded to those who “performed
exemplary deeds of service for their country or their fellow
citizens.”
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