On the morning of Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine was scheduled to be a panelist for the first in a series of “Democracy Dialogues,” to be hosted that evening by University of Virginia Center of Politics Director Larry Sabato.
By that afternoon, however, Kaine quickly became unavailable; he was barricaded in a “safe space” in the U.S. Capitol, without a phone and away from the chaos unfolding in the same building. He eventually returned to the Senate floor to see through the certification of President-elect Joe Biden, the move Donald Trump supporters infamously rioted against via violent siege.
Thursday marked one year since that insurrection, and Sabato was again moderating an online event from the Rotunda.
This time, Kaine was available, offering unique insight as one of Sabato’s many high-profile guests – from journalists to elected leaders and beyond – for
“I was extremely angry on Jan. 6 – that was my dominant emotion,” said Kaine, a Democrat from Virginia. “I had an emotion of relief that I had told my staff to stay home. … But my other emotion, not a surprising one, was anger, but it was an anger unlike any I’ve ever felt in my life. And it took me months to figure out why. What was the source of this anger? And why was it different than all other angers?