The vote was 54 to 35, with only six Republicans voting with Democrats on the House-passed bill.
At least 10 GOP senators were needed to advance the bill.
Our live coverage has ended. Read more about the vote here.
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Democrats push for House select committee after Senate Republicans derail bipartisan probe
From CNN's Manu Raju and Ali Zaslav
House Democrats are actively considering mounting a probe of their own into the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, signaling they don’t plan to let the issue go away in the aftermath of Senate Republicans derailing the creation of an outside commission to probe the deadly insurrection.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has made clear repeatedly that moving to create a select committee has always remained a fallback option — something that would require support of a majority of the Democratic-led House to create. And a number of Democrats said on Friday that they believe Pelosi will indeed create the new committee — and that the caucus would strongly support such an effort.
Rep. Joaquin Castro, a Texas Democrat who served as an impeachment manager in Trump’s second trial, said the Senate should pass a bill creating an outside commission.
“However, in the event that it fails, the Congress should create a select committee to fully investigate the causes and consequences of the insurrection on Jan. 6,” Castro told CNN.
If the House creates such a panel, it would give Democrats the power to issue subpoenas and schedule hearings and to drive an investigation into the causes of the attack and former President Trump’s role behind it. And it would prompt a backlash from Republicans who are already trying to paint such an effort as a partisan endeavor, despite their own role in scuttling a bipartisan outside panel comprised of 10 commissioners, equally divided between the two parties.
“I don’t think a select committee is the proper way to go,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy told CNN last week, calling it a “Pelosi select committee.”
Pelosi’s office would not discuss her plans, but she has repeatedly made clear that her preference would be to create a bipartisan outside commission and that a select committee remained a clear option on the table. Doing so might create a turf war with existing House committee chairs, but Democratic lawmakers on Friday downplayed that likelihood given the desire among their caucus to mount a sprawling investigation into what happened.
In a statement on Friday after Republicans successfully filibustered the bill to create the commission, Pelosi signaled the job wasn’t done.
Republicans on Friday said they recognized this was a likely next step. To Senate Republicans who opposed the commission, they said that if Pelosi takes that step, it would be easier to contend such a probe would be geared at helping Democrats in the 2022 midterms.
Yet other Republicans said they were perplexed that their colleagues wouldn’t endorse a bipartisan commission, arguing their party is ceding control to Democrats who are almost certain to mount a headline-generating probe into everything that happened on Jan. 6.
In the Senate, two separate committees — the Senate Rules Committee and Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee — are both conducting probes about the lack of security preparedness on Jan. 6 and will issue a report on the week of June 7. But those investigations are narrowly focused on the response effort that day, rather than the causes behind the insurrection.
On Friday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer would not say if he believes his committee chairmen should mount their own investigation into the Jan. 6 attack.
But he made clear he thinks the House should move ahead.
“We preferred to do it bipartisan,” Schumer said. “Every Democrat voted for bipartisan, but facts must come out,” he said when asked whether the findings from a Democrat-led committee would be credible.
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Sicknick's mother and girlfriend say they were disappointed by GOP senators in CNN exclusive interview
From CNN's Jeremy Herb
Gladys Sicknick
CNN
The mother of fallen US Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick says she was disappointed that Senate Republicans blocked a bill Friday to create a bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection after what she described as “tense” meetings with many GOP senators on Thursday.
In an exclusive interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper Friday, Gladys Sicknick and her son’s girlfriend Sandra Garza said they were clinging to hope that they could change the minds of senators opposed to the independent commission, but were still not surprised at the ultimate outcome.
“I think you know it’s all talk and no action. Clearly, they’re not backing the blue,” Garza said of the Republicans who opposed the commission. “It’s just unbelievable to me that they could do nothing about this.”
Sicknick, Garza, Capitol Hill Police Officer Harry Dunn and DC Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone met with more than a dozen Republican senators Thursday ahead of the Senate’s vote Friday on creating a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection. They had requested meetings with all 50 GOP senators on Friday.
Sickinck said that the senators were nice to them, but that the meetings were also tense because they knew that many of the senators weren’t sincere – and were not going to budge in their opposition to forming the commission
“They were very charming, they knew what they were doing, they knew how to talk to us, but we kind of held back,” Sicknick said. “It was just, it was tense, and we made believe everything was fine and we were very nice to them, for the most part.”
Six Republicans voted in favor of the 54 to 35 test vote on Friday, leaving it short of the 60 votes needed to advance the legislation.
Sicknick said she was hopeful that some of the senators who voted for the legislation, including Sens. Rob Portman of Ohio and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, were swayed in part by their meetings.
“Maybe we changed their minds. That would be great,” Sicknick said.
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White House says lawmakers who voted against bill failed to uphold oath to defend Constitution
From CNN's Jason Hoffman
White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Republican senators who voted against a bill to create an independent commission to investigate the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot failed to uphold their oath to support and defend the Constitution.
She said President Biden has been clear that the “shameful events” of Jan. 6 need to be independently and fully investigated and he remains committed to that. She added that the White House will continue to work with Congress to find a path forward to ensure that happens.
Jean-Pierre would not say if Biden is considering forming a presidential commission, but said he believes an investigation should be done in a bipartisan manner.
The vote to form an independent commission was 54 to 35, but failed to get the 60 votes needed to advance, as only six Republicans joined Democrats in support of the bill.
On Thursday, before the vote took place, Biden told reporters, “I can’t imagine anyone voting against establishing a commission on the greatest assault since the Civil War on the Capitol.”
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Go There: CNN's Jessica Dean is on Capitol Hill with the latest following the commission vote
Schumer says he reserves right to force Senate to vote on bill again "at the appropriate time"
From CNN's Ryan Nobles
Schumer talks to reporters after the Senate voted against the formation of an independent commission to investigate the attack at the U.S. Capitol on May 28.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer criticized his GOP colleagues and warned he reserves “the right to force the Senate to vote on the bill again at the appropriate time” in a “Dear Colleagues” letter sent after Republicans blocked the Jan. 6 commission bill.
“Senate Republicans, at the personal request of Leader McConnell, also continue their brazen attempts to whitewash the attack of January 6th by filibustering the House-passed bipartisan January 6th Commission, even though Speaker Pelosi and I agreed to changes proposed by Senator Collins,” he wrote.
Schumer outlined the work done by the Senate in this legislative session, including the bipartisan Covid-19 Hate Crimes Act and the advancement of a bipartisan bill to address competition with China.
“At the same time, we have also seen the limits of bipartisanship and the resurgence of Republican obstructionism,” he wrote, noting the delayed passage of the China bill.
Schumer said next month’s work period will be “extremely challenging.” In June, he said the Senate will work to pass the Paycheck Fairness Act, confirm President Biden’s judicial nominees and potentially consider gun safety and LGBTQ equality legislation. In the final week of the month, he said the chamber will vote on S1, a sweeping election bill that has faced staunch Republican pushback.
He also said Senate Democrats will work to advance Biden’s infrastructure and jobs agenda. “As the President continues to discuss infrastructure legislation with Senate Republicans, the committees will hold hearings and continue their work on the Build Back Better agenda – with or without the support of Republican Senators. We must pass comprehensive jobs and infrastructure legislation this summer,” he wrote.
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Pelosi: "Republicans clearly put their election concerns above the security of the Congress and country"
From CNN's Kristin Wilson and Ryan Nobles
After Senate Republicans voted to block legislation to establish a bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wrote in a statement saying Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Republicans’ “denial of the truth of the January 6th insurrection brings shame to the Senate.”
Pelosi said in urging his members to vote against the commission, as CNN reported, McConnell asked Republicans “to be complicit in his undermining of the truth of January 6th” and “in bowing to McConnell’s personal favor request, Republican Senators surrendered to the January 6th mob assault.”
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These 9 Republicans didn't vote at all on the commission
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer and Ali Zaslav
Sen. Marsha Blackburn speaks during a hearing on Capitol Hill in October 2020.
Greg Nash/Pool/Getty Images
Nine Republican senators did not vote today on the procedural vote that would have advanced the Jan. 6 commission bill.
They are:
Sen. Marsha Blackburn
Sen. Roy Blunt
Sen. Mike Braun
Sen. Richard Burr
Sen. Jim Inhofe
Sen. Mike Rounds
Sen. James Risch
Sen. Richard Shelby
Sen. Pat Toomey (who is notable because he was on the fence)
Another 35 Republicans voted no, while just six voted yes. At least 10 GOP senators needed to vote yes to advance the bill.
Toomey’s office told CNN he missed today’s key procedural vote on the commission bill due to a family commitment, but said had he been in Washington, he would have voted to advance the legislation.
If Toomey was present at the key vote today, as well as the two Democrats who missed it, Sens. Kyrsten Sinema and Patty Murray, the final tally would have been 57 in favor, which still would have fallen short of the 60 votes needed to break a filibuster.
Toomey, Republican from Pennsylvania, is retiring after his term. He was one of the seven Republicans who voted to convict former President Trump in his second impeachment trial.
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Schumer: GOP lawmakers who blocked Jan. 6 commission bill chose to defend Trump's "big lie"
From CNN's Adrienne Vogt
Senate TV
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Republican lawmakers who voted against advancing the Jan. 6 commission bill did so “out of fear or fealty to Donald Trump.”
Schumer said voting in favor of the bipartisan commission “should’ve been simple.”
“Senate Republicans for months publicly supported the idea of a commission. But now all of a sudden, the Senate minority and the Senate minority leader waged a partisan filibuster against the bill. This vote has made it official: Donald Trump’s big lie has now fully enveloped the Republican party. Trump’s big lie is now the defining principle of what was once the party of Lincoln,” Schumer said.
“Shame on the Republican party for trying to sweep the horrors of that day under the rug because they’re afraid of Donald Trump,” he added.
Six Republican senators — Mitt Romney, Susan Collins, Bill Cassidy, Rob Portman, Lisa Murkowski, and Ben Sasse — voted to advance the commission bill.
These are the 6 GOP senators who voted to advance the Jan. 6 commission bill
From CNN's Alex Rogers
Getty Images
Senate Republicans blocked a bill Friday to create a commission investigating the pro-Trump riot at the US Capitol, preventing a high-profile probe into the attack that led to the deaths of five people and injured about 140 police officers.
The vote was 54 to 35. Six GOP senators voted in favor of advancing the bill:
Sen. Mitt Romney
Sen. Susan Collins
Sen. Bill Cassidy
Sen. Rob Portman
Sen. Lisa Murkowski
Sen. Ben Sasse
At least 10 Senate Republicans were needed to join all Democrats to advance the bill. Twice as many Republicans as expected voted for the commission, but not enough to save it.
The vote underscored the deeply partisan divide that has emerged over the insurrection earlier this year.
The House passed-bill would have set up a 10-person panel to figure out what happened on Jan. 6, including the law enforcement’s preparedness and response, and provide recommendations in order “to prevent future acts of targeted violence and domestic terrorism.”
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JUST IN: Senate Republicans block bill to create Jan. 6 commission
From CNN's Alex Rogers, Manu Raju and Ted Barrett
Senate TV
Senate Republicans just blocked a bill that would have created an independent and bipartisan commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riot that left five people dead and about 140 officers injured.
By a vote of 54 to 35, the Senate failed to advance the commission. At least 10 GOP senators were needed to reach the necessary 60 votes to pass the key procedural vote.
The House-passed legislation aimed to create a 10-person panel to figure out what happened, including the law enforcement’s “preparedness and response” and then report recommendations in order “to prevent future acts of targeted violence and domestic terrorism.”
The refusal of at least 10 Republican senators to vote for the commission underscores the deeply partisan divide that has emerged over the insurrection earlier this year and comes at a crucial time for Capitol Hill where Democrats are struggling to advance President Biden’s agenda.
This is how the commission would have worked if it passed:
The panel would have attempted to find bipartisan consensus. The Democratic and Republican leaders of the House and Senate would have evenly split the selection of its 10 members.
A subpoena would have only be issued to compel witness testimony if it had the support of the majority of members, or if the commission’s chairperson, chosen by Democrats, and the vice-chairperson, chosen by Republicans, came to an agreement.
The commission would have also required to submit to the President and Congress a final report by the end of 2021 and dissolve 60 days thereafter — about nine months before the 2022 elections.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has strongly suggested that she would approve a select committee in the House to investigate what led to the Jan. 6 insurrection if a vote to form the commission fails in the Senate. Last week, the House passed the bill 252-175, with 35 Republicans joining Democrats.
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GOP Sen. Cassidy explains why he voted to advance the Jan. 6 commission bill
From CNN's Ali Zaslav
Greg Nash/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
GOP Sen. Bill Cassidy, who voted to advance the Jan. 6 commission bill, handed reporters his statement after leaving the chamber.
Cassidy said the commission he voted to advance ensured GOP had equal power over the panel and set a deadline of Dec. 31, 2021 so it wouldn’t be drawn out.
He expressed concerns about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s role regarding “lack of adequate security” on Jan. 6 and said he doesn’t think a Democrat-run investigation would evaluate that concern.
Cassidy did not state his position on the bill before today’s vote. Only Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine had indicated they planned to join Democrats and support the bill.
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Romney won't agree with Murkowski that McConnell's opposition to commission is just political
From CNN's Morgan Rimmer
J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Sen. Mitt Romney wouldn’t say he agrees with fellow GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski that opposing the Jan. 6 commission is a purely political move by Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
“I’m not going to make that judgement,” he said.
However, he did say that it was “unfortunate” that the commission would likely not go forward.
He added, “I think it would be appropriate to have further evaluation of what happened on Jan. 6, and who’s responsible, and how we can prevent that from happening again.”
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Schumer will speak after the Senate vote
From CNN's Ali Zaslav and Manu Raju
The key procedural vote on the Jan. 6 riot commission is underway on the Senate floor, and it is expected to fail to reach the needed 60 votes to move on to the actual bill.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer explained that the deal they’ve made with Republican senators is a “good solution” because they get to vote on the commission, and it occurs “in the light of day, not at three in the morning.” Schumer also said it’s a deal that Democrats proposed.
Schumer said he will speak more on the commission after the vote as well.
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NOW: Senate is holding procedural vote on commission to investigate Jan. 6 attack
Senate TV
The Senate is voting now on whether to advance a bill that would create a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riot that led to the deaths of five people and about 140 police officers injured.
Senate Republicans are expected to block the bill. Only three GOP senators — Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska — have expressed their support for advancing the legislation, and Democrats need 10.
Last week, the House passed the bill 252-175, with 35 Republicans joining Democrats.
How the commission would work: The commission would attempt to find bipartisan consensus. The Democratic and Republican leaders of the House and Senate evenly split the selection of its 10 members. A subpoena can only be issued to compel witness testimony if it has the support of the majority of members, or if the commission’s chairperson, chosen by Democrats, and the vice-chairperson, chosen by Republicans, come to an agreement.
The commission is also required to submit to the President and Congress a final report by the end of 2021 and dissolve 60 days thereafter — about nine months before the 2022 elections.
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Schumer says the Jan. 6 riot commission vote will happen in the next hour
From CNN's Manu Raju and Ali Zaslav
Jonathan Ernst/Pool/Getty Images
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer just announced an agreement. The vote on the Jan. 6 commission will happen within the next hour, and the vote on the Endless Frontier Act will be delayed until June 8.
He also said the bipartisan China competition legislation will be delayed until after the Memorial Day recess on Tuesday June 8. This comes after Republicans proposed to have vote today on Jan. 6 commission and delay votes on Endless Frontier Act until Tuesday June 8, as CNN reported. Sen. Rand Paul warned if Democrats didn’t accept the deal, they would drag out the process through the weekend.
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GOP proposes voting today on Jan. 6 commission and delaying vote on Endless Frontier Act until June
From CNN's Manu Raju
As a group of GOP senators hold up votes on the floor, Republicans have proposed to have a vote today on the Jan. 6 commission and delay votes on the Endless Frontier Act until June 8.
Sen. Rand Paul warned if Democrats don’t accept this deal, they will drag out the process through the weekend.
There needs to be unanimous consent in order to schedule these votes.
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There's frustration on both sides over the GOP's delay tactics
From CNN's Manu Raju
Two senators — one Democrat and one Republican — say there is anger and frustration on both sides at their colleagues who are holding up votes and dragging out the Senate voting process, since the votes on both the Jan. 6 commission bill and an unrelated bill (that’s currently delaying getting to the commission bill) are inevitable.
The key vote on the commission was expected as early as Thursday, but due to the order of Senate procedure, that vote had to wait until the previous legislation was cleared. Republican senators have delayed overnight passage of a massive bill designed to increase American competitiveness with China, and that means the key procedural vote on a bill to create the Jan. 6 commission has to wait.
“Horsesh*t,” one senior GOP senator said today.
As he entered the Senate, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said when asked how long today’s session will take: “You’ll have to ask the folks who feel compelled to speak.”
Asked by CNN if he thinks votes on the China bill and Jan. 6 bill will be done today, McConnell answered, “I hope so but we will see how it goes.”
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Meanwhile, at least 450 people have been charged in US Capitol insurrection
From CNN's Hannah Rabinowitz, Marshall Cohen and Katelyn Polantz
Samuel Corum/Getty Images
As the Senate delays a key procedural vote on a bill to create a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, a CNN review of court documents reveals that the Justice Department has charged at least 450 people in connection with the insurrection.
The deadly attack on the Capitol left five people dead and more than 140 police officers injured.
Gladys Sicknick, the mother of fallen US Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, told reporters that she hoped her meetings would sway Republicans.
But even after those meetings, which two sources familiar said were cordial, most of the senators told her they wouldn’t be changing their minds, likely leaving the commission short of the 10 Republican votes needed to pass.
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Schumer says the Senate will finish the China bill, which delayed key commission vote, today
From CNN's Ali Zaslav and Ted Barrett
Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Friday morning that he expects several GOP senators to continue their speeches today – which are delaying final passage of the China competition bill.
But he pledged they have every intention of sticking it out “until the job is done” and the Senate passes the bipartisan legislation.
He did not say anything in his floor remarks about timing on the Jan. 6 commission bill.
Some background: Republican senators delayed passage of a massive bill designed to increase American competitiveness with China, which in turn delayed a key procedural vote on a bill to create an independent panel to investigate the Jan. 6 riot on the US Capitol.
The Senate adjourned just before 3 a.m. ET today after at least eight Republicans requested time to speak on the floor overnight — for up to an hour each — to voice their objections to the legislative package aimed at China, known as “the US Innovation and Competition Act.” Those GOP senators slammed what they said is a rushed process to make last-minute changes they have yet to review.
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Murkowski whacks Senate GOP colleagues for plans to block Jan. 6 commission bill
From CNN's Manu Raju
Bill O'Leary/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, one of a handful of Republicans who backs the Jan. 6 commission bill, took aim at her GOP colleagues tonight for moving to block the measure — and was critical of the rationale by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell that such a commission could prove politically problematic for the GOP ahead of the 2022 midterms.
“Is that really what this is about is everything is just one election cycle after another? Or are we going to acknowledge that as a country that is based on these principles of democracy that we hold so dear. .. One of those is that we have free and fair elections, and we respect the results of those elections and we allow for a peaceful transition of power. I kind of want that to endure beyond just one election,” she continued.
Murkowski also spoke about her conversation with the mother of fallen US Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, and was asked about worries Republicans might have about enduring Trump’s wrath if they back the commission. She said some of her colleagues “don’t want to rock the boat.”
Some more background: Last week, the House passed the bill 252-175, with 35 Republicans joining Democrats. Two Democratic senators — Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona — have publicly urged Senate Republican senators to also back the bill.
But only three GOP senators — Murkowski, Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah and Susan Collins of Maine — have so far expressed their support for advancing the legislation, and Democrats need 10. The vast majority of the 50 Senate Republicans are expected to oppose it.
CNN’s Alex Rogers and Ted Barrett contributed reporting to this post.
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Here's a reminder of what the Jan. 6 commission would do if it passes in Congress
From CNN's Alex Rogers, Manu Raju and Ted Barrett
Senate Republicans are expected to block a bill creating a commission to investigate the pro-Trump riot at the US Capitol on Jan. 6, preventing a high-profile probe into the attack that led to the deaths of five people and about 140 police officers injured.
The timing of the vote to create the independent panel is still not known because it’s unclear how long Republicans will drag out the fight over another unrelated bill. The Senate adjourned just before 3 a.m. ET and was expected to resume around 9 a.m. ET.
Despite the delay, the commission vote is still expected to fall short of the 60 votes it needs to advance.
Here’s how the commission would work, if it were passed in Congress:
The panel would attempt to find bipartisan consensus. The Democratic and Republican leaders of the House and Senate evenly split the selection of its 10 members.
A subpoena can only be issued to compel witness testimony if it has the support of the majority of members, or if the commission’s chairperson, chosen by Democrats, and the vice-chairperson, chosen by Republicans, come to an agreement.
The commission is also required to submit to the President and Congress a final report by the end of 2021 and dissolve 60 days thereafter — about nine months before the 2022 elections.
The refusal of at least 10 Republican senators to vote for the commission underscores the deeply partisan divide that has emerged over the insurrection earlier this year and comes at a crucial time for Capitol Hill where Democrats are struggling to advance President Biden’s agenda. Some Democrats are citing the resistance by Republicans as a sign for why the Senate should blow up the 60-vote threshold to pass most legislation, given the narrowly divided chamber.
While some Republicans said months ago that a 9/11-type commission into the security of the Capitol was a necessity, they’ve since argued that it wouldn’t yield any new information amid other law enforcement investigations and arrests. Their opposition has infuriated Democrats, who assert that Republicans are trying to protect themselves ahead of the midterm elections.
Read more about where things stand in the Senate here.
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The mother of the Capitol officer who died after the riot wants GOP senators to vote for commission
From CNN's Jamie Gangel
Gladys Sicknick, the mother of late Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, leaves a meeting with Sen. Mitt Romney as she meets with senators to urge for a January 6 commission on May 27 in Washington, DC.
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
The mother of fallen US Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick met with more than a dozen Republican senators yesterday, urging them to vote to establish a commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection. But even after those meetings, which two sources familiar said were cordial, most of the senators told her they wouldn’t be changing their minds, likely leaving the commission short of the 10 Republican votes needed to pass.
Most GOP senators made it clear to Gladys Sicknick, her son’s girlfriend Sandra Garza, Capitol Hill Police Officer Harry Dunn and DC Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone that they don’t want a commission to investigate what happened that day, underscoring the deeply partisan divide that has emerged over the insurrection and once again illuminating the GOP’s fealty to former President Donald Trump.
Earlier in the day, Sicknick had told reporters that she hoped her meetings would sway Republicans.
“This is why I’m here today,” she added. “Usually I’m staying in the background, and I just couldn’t stay quiet anymore.”
But the meetings, according to a source familiar with them, were “very hard” for Sicknick, who — along with Garza — wore a necklace with some of her son’s ashes in them.
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We still don't know when senators could vote on the Jan. 6 bill. Here's why.
From CNN's Manu Raju
The U.S. Capitol is seen in Washington, D.C., on May 27.
Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg/Getty Images
The vote timing in the Senate today is still not known.
That’s because when they get back in at 9 a.m. ET, the GOP can yield back debate time or continue to run out the clock. Once they either yield back or run out clock, there are four votes related to China bill.
After last China bill procedural vote today, the GOP will have to decide whether to yield back debate time or continue using up to 30 hours of debate.
Then there will be final passage of the China bill.
Then it’s the Jan. 6 procedural vote.
As with anything in the Senate, this all can happen quickly with an agreement, or itcan drag out if any one senator objects and wants to slow things down.
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Senators were working until 3 a.m. ET, but they didn't get to a key vote on the Jan. 6 commission
From CNN's Ryan Nobles, Ted Barrett and Manu Raju
Republican senators have delayed passage of a massive bill designed to increase American competitiveness with China, and that means a key procedural vote on a bill to create an independent panel to investigate the Jan. 6 riot on the US Capitol has been delayed until later today.
The timing of the vote to create the independent panel is still not known because it’s unclear how long Republicans will drag out the fight over the previous bill. The Senate adjourned just before 3 a.m. ET and was expected to resume around 9 a.m. ET.
At least eight Republicans requested time to speak on the floor overnight — for up to an hour each — to voice their objections to the legislative package aimed at China, known as “the US Innovation and Competition Act,” and those GOP senators slammed what they said is a rushed process to make last-minute changes they have yet to review.
Three senators spoke late last night and early Friday morning — Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana, and Sen. Rick Scott of Florida — before the Senate adjourned, meaning there are at least five senators who will likely speak when the Senate resumes.