
Senate Majority Leader Schumer says National Guard members will never again be displaced like they were last night, when many were directed to leave the U.S. Capitol and go to parking lots.
— Mitchell Miller (@mmillerwtop) January 22, 2021
“We honestly just feel betrayed,” one Guardsman told CNN, noting that a day before, congressmen had come by for photos with the different National Guard units that came to Washington to support security around the inauguration. “After everything went seamlessly, we were deemed useless and banished to a corner of a parking garage.” Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., an Iraq War veteran and retired Army National Guard lieutenant colonel, tweeted: “Just made a number of calls and have been informed Capitol Police have apologized to the Guardsmen and they will be allowed back into the complex tonight. I’ll keep checking to make sure they are.” After midnight, Duckworth tweeted an update: “Troops are now all out of the garage. Now I can go to bed.” Politico reported that they had been allowed back into the Capitol. A majority of the troops who had been stationed in the District to provide protection during President Joe Biden’s inauguration in the wake of the deadly Capitol riot on Jan. 6 are headed home. The National Guard Bureau said Thursday that of the nearly 26,000 Guard troops deployed to D.C. for the inaugural, just 10,600 remain on duty. The bureau said the Guard is helping states with coordination and the logistics so that troops can get home. The Guard said that it may take several days to make all the arrangements to return the 15,000 home, but it should be complete in five to 10 days. Guard members will have to turn in equipment, make travel plans and go through COVID-19 screening. Some local law enforcement agencies have asked for continued assistance from the Guard, so roughly 7,000 troops are expected to stay in the region through the end of the month. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
