After tours of duty as an Air Force pilot in Iraq and Afghanistan,
Adam Kinzinger returned home never expecting to see battle again.
Then, on January 6, 2021, he watched as fellow Americans broke
windows, ransacked the US Capitol and attacked police officers. All
the Illinois Republican congressman could do was barricade his office
door, pull out his gun just in case . . . and hope. Then he voted to
impeach Donald Trump — and the conservative media heaped scorn on
him. When he joined the House Select Committee to investigate the
Capitol riot, the venom turned to terrifying threats: calls and
letters vowing to execute his wife and newborn son. The question of
how America hit such a dangerous juncture haunted him until Kinzinger
finally concluded that enough was enough . . . to unchecked extremism,
partisan misinformation campaigns, and the perversion of the
conservative values he’d long held dear. In his new book, Renegade,
Kinzinger explores that question, documenting the spiraling of hatred,
the unraveling of the party he long served and the inner workings and
surprising findings of the January 6 committee. He joins us for a deep
dive into the committee discussions, his decision to break from the
Republican Party and why we should be alarmed by the cultural and
political rupture that endangers our democracy. Adam D. Kinzinger
represented Illinois’ 16th Congressional District from 2011 to 2023,
serving on the House Committees on Energy and Commerce and the House
Foreign Affairs Committee. He is currently a CNN senior political
commentator. Kinzinger will be in conversation with Amy Davidson
Sorkin, staff writer and Comment contributor at The New Yorker.
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31/10/2023 Last update