Fallen officer's family snubs McConnell and McCarthy at Jan. 6 gold medal ceremony
Officers who responded to the Capitol attack pointedly refused to shake hands with the two GOP leaders as they received top honors from Congress Tuesday.
Police officers who responded to the Jan. 6 Capitol attack and some of their family members pointedly declined to shake the hands of Mitch McConnell and Kevin McCarthy as they accepted Congressional Gold Medals on Tuesday.
Officers and the family of fallen officer Brian Sicknick shook hands with Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer as they accepted the medals, but quickly moved past the House and Senate Republican leaders — despite McConnell outstretching his hand. All senior congressional leaders were participating in the event to honor U.S. Capitol Police officers, Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police and others who responded during the riot.
"May this medal — the highest honor that Congress can bestow — serve as a token of our nation's deepest gratitude and respect: not as full but as a token," Pelosi said prior to awarding the medals at a ceremony that took place in the Capitol Rotunda.
Among those who walked past the congressional leaders were the family of Sicknick, a U.S. Capitol Police officer who died in the days following the attack and later lay in honor in the Capitol.
In ceremony remarks after the snub, McConnell and McCarthy both thanked the officers for their heroics during that day.
"To all the law enforcement officers who keep this country safe: thank you," McCarthy said. "Too many people take that for granted, but days like today force us to realize how much we owe the thin blue line."
Asked about the situation later Tuesday, McConnell didn't criticize the family's actions.
"Today, we gave the gold medal to the heroes of January 6. We admire and respect them. They laid their lives on the line and that's why we gave a gold medal today to the heroes of January 6," the Senate Republican leader said at his weekly press conference.
Police officers have criticized McCarthy's response following the attack, including former D.C. officer Michael Fanone, who suffered a traumatic brain injury and a heart attack in the riot and secretly recorded a meeting with the House Republican leader. Some House Republicans have downplayed the seriousness of the attack, and McCarthy has personally minimized former President Donald Trump's role in stoking the mob.
McConnell has called the Jan. 6 attack a "violent insurrection," but also joined McCarthy and other Republicans in voting against the establishment of a bipartisan commission to investigate the riot. The GOP Senate leader also voted against convicting Trump in his second impeachment trial over the former president's role in Jan. 6.