Several Trump supporters involved in Jan. 6 are running for office this year
WASHINGTON â Former President Donald Trump has promised to pardon many of his supporters convicted of crimes related to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol if heâs elected in November.
Further down the ballot in the 2024 elections, several convicted rioters and others who were involved in the lead-up to the Capitol attack are running for local and national office themselves.
This fall will also see a candidate who was on the other side of the clash on Jan. 6, 2021. Former Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, who faced down a crowd of rioters, is running to replace retiring Democratic Rep. John Sarbanes of Maryland. The primary in that race is on May 14.
NBC News has identified seven candidates who are running for elected office this year who were at the Capitol on Jan. 6 or attended the Trump âStop the Stealâ rally that preceded it, plus three more who ran but have already lost in primaries. Only one candidate â Derrick Evans of West Virginia â returned NBC Newsâ request for comment for this story.
Kimberly Dragoo, Missouri
Kimberly Dragoo, who pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor in connection with the Jan. 6 attack, is running for a seat on the St. Joseph Board of Education in Missouri.
Dragoo participated in the riot with her husband, Steven, who photographed the couple throughout the day, including when she went through a broken window into the Capitol, according to court documents. She is one of 10 candidates running for three open seats for a board that oversees 10,000 students and 1,500 staff members, per the districtâs website. The election will occur on April 2.
Michele Morrow, North Carolina
Michele Morrow won the Republican primary for North Carolina Superintendent of Public Education and will face democrat Mo Green in November.
Morrow has said publicly that she attended the âStop the Stealâ rally on Jan. 6 but that she did not enter the Capitol building. Morrow spoke to a local news station about her experience shortly after Jan. 6, saying that she âwas up thereâ and âaround the Capitolâ and tried to discourage others from committing violence. She said she was âtelling everyone we cannot expect our lawmakers to uphold the law if weâre going to break the law.â She has not been charged in connection with Jan. 6.
Morrow has recently gained national prominence for past social media posts in which she called for violence against prominent Democrats, including calls for the execution of President Joe Biden and then-President Barack Obama, which were first reported by CNN. In a video posted on X, she responded to the reporting of her posts saying they were âold comments taken out of context, made in jest, or never made in the first place.â She accused the media of reporting on the statements to âhide the radicalism of the Democrat platform.â
If elected, Morrow would oversee the nearly 3,000 public schools in North Carolina, attended by 1.4 million children. Morrow has no elected experience, has said that she homeschools her children and has described public schooling as âindoctrinationâ in social media posts.
Jason Riddle, New Hampshire
Jason Riddle pleaded guilty to entering the Capitol and theft of government property and was sentenced to 90 days in prison. Now, he is running for Congress in New Hampshireâs Second District. He admitted to chugging a bottle of wine inside the building and provided a photo of himself holding the bottle to media outlets, per government filings.
This is his second run for Congress. He also ran in 2022, but his candidacy was complicated by the fact that he was incarcerated at the time. He also initially expressed confusion about what office he was running for. In an interview with NBC Boston, Riddle said that he planned to challenge Democratic Rep. Annie Kuster but he âthought Ann was a state representative.â When told that she was a member of Congress, he replied: âOh, well, I guess I have to run for that then.â
Kuster recently announced her retirement, vacating her seat in the Concord-based swing district.
In a survey about his policy positions for the website Ballotpedia, Riddle described himself as a ârecently released January 6th political prisonerâ and lists Jesus as his only endorsement. The filing deadline for New Hampshire is in June and he is one of several Republicans seeking to run in the GOP primary, which is set for Sept. 10.
Anthony Kern, Arizona
Anthony Kern is a current member of the Arizona Senate who signed a document falsely âcertifyingâ the Arizona election for Trump as a fake elector. Kern attended the âStop the Stealâ rally and was outside the Capitol while rioters entered it; multiple news outlets identified him in video of the day posted online. Kern tweeted on Jan. 6 that he was in Washington for âD-Day,â using the hashtag #StopTheSteal. He later condemned the violence. He has not been charged in relation to the attack and there is no evidence that he entered the Capitol.
Kern had an ethics complaint filed against him for allegedly using campaign funds for his travel expenses to attend the Jan. 6 rally, but he has not responded to requests for a reply, the Arizona Secretary of Stateâs Office said. He is currently the subject of a state criminal investigation for his role as a fake elector. He has denied all wrongdoing.Â
Kern is running for Congress in Arizonaâs 8th District, where he faces several opponents in the race to replace retiring Republican Debbie Lesko. His opponents include Blake Masters, the Republican candidate for Senate in Arizona in 2022, and Abe Hamadeh, the Republican candidate for Arizona Attorney General in 2022. (Hamadeh has filed three legal challenges to his loss in the election, all of which are still pending.)
The district, which covers the northwest Phoenix suburbs, is considered solidly Republican, with Trump having won it in 2020 by 13 points.
Jacob Chansley, Arizona
Jacob Chansley, better known as the âQAnon Shaman,â has indicated that heâs running for the same seat as Kern, but as a libertarian.
Chansley was sentenced to 41 months in prison for felony obstruction of a proceeding. He is notorious for his unusual attire, having worn a furry horned headdress on Jan. 6.
He filed a statement of interest to run for Congress in November. Chansley does not appear to have a campaign website, has not filed a statement of candidacy with the Federal Election Commission and is not listed as a candidate on the Arizona Libertarian Partyâs website. He, like the other candidates, did not respond to NBC Newsâ request for comment.
Derrick Evans, West Virginia
Derrick Evans, a former West Virginia state lawmaker, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to three months in prison on a felony charge for his role on Jan. 6. Now, he is running for Congress in the stateâs 1st District. He will face incumbent Republican Carol Miller in a May 14 primary.
Evans, who had been sworn into office just weeks before the Jan. 6 attack, livestreamed his activities that day on Facebook, including him yelling, âDerrick Evans is in the Capitol!â
When reached for comment this week about how his connection to the riot was affecting his candidacy, Evans said in a statement that he believes there was an effort to steal the 2020 election from Trump.
Katrina Pierson, Texas
Pierson is headed to a runoff in her bid for Texasâ 33rd state House District. Pierson, a former Trump spokesperson, helped organize the rally at the Ellipse and served as a liaison between organizers and the White House, including sharing Trumpâs plan to call on his supporters to march to the Capitol, according to the House Jan. 6 Committeeâs report. There is no evidence that Pierson went near the Capitol or into the building and she has not been charged with any crimes.
Pierson faces incumbent state Rep. Justin Holland, also a Republican, in a May 28 runoff. She was endorsed in the race by Gov. Greg Abbot and Attorney General Ken Paxton, who is targeting state House members who voted to impeach him, including Holland.
Candidates who lost
Several candidates involved in Jan. 6 have already lost their bids for office this cycle.
Ryan Zink, who was convicted of a felony and two misdemeanors for his role in the riot, lost his primary challenge to Rep. Jodey Arrington in Texasâ 19th Congressional District. He filmed himself breaching the Capitol in footage cited by prosecutors, saying, âWeâre storming the Capitol! You canât stop us!â He received about 3% of the vote.
Phillip Sean Grillo, who was convicted of five charges, including one felony for his actions that day, lost the race to be the Republican candidate in the special election to replace George Santos in New Yorkâs 3rd District. He testified at his trial that he had âno ideaâ Congress met at the Capitol.
Bianca Gracia lost her bid to represent Texasâ 128th state House District. According to the Jan. 6 committee report, Gracia helped organize a pro-Trump rally in Washington on Jan. 5 and had close ties to the extremist Proud Boys group, even meeting with leaders of that group and of the Oath Keepers on the night before the riot. Gracia gave testimony to the House Jan. 6 committee but largely invoked her Fifth Amendment rights in declining to answer questions. She has not been charged with any crimes and does not appear to have been at or near the Capitol on Jan. 6.
Gracia was endorsed by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton but that wasnât enough to help her defeat ultra-conservative Texas house member Briscoe Cain, who assisted the Trump legal team in its election results challenges in 2020.