Michelle Obama ‘Rattled’ When Trump Encouraged Capitol Attack: The ‘Most Frightening Thing I’ve Ever Witnessed’

The former first lady detailed watching the footage of the deadly assault on the Capitol on TV, describing her 'shock' at the January 6 insurrection.

michelle obama, donald trumpView galleryMichelle Obama visits the Royal Arena in connection with her book tour for her biography 'Becoming' in Copenhagen, Denmark, 09 April 2019. In her book, she tells about life as America's first African American first lady.
Michelle Obama visits Copenhagen, Denmark - 09 Apr 2019EXCLUSIVE: Former First Lady Michelle Obama steps out with friends Bruce Springsteen and wife Patti Scialfa at celebrity restaurant Polo Bar in New York City. The two families have been friends since The Boss campaigned for Barack Obama during his successful run for the White House in 2008. Michelle famously told her President husband he needed to spend more time with Springsteen. Both men have talked about their friendship — fortified in part by the bond between their wives, Michelle and Patti. In the first episode of a podcast, called Renegades, Obama, 59, said he and Springsteen, 71, "grew to trust each other" based on conversations in which they reflected on feeling "invisible" throughout their childhoods. Springsteen sang with a gospel choir at the newly elected president's inauguration in 2009 and later recalled how he thought Obama had the wrong number the first time the Chicago Democrat called him. "And I said, 'OK, let me figure this out. I am a guitar-playing high school graduate from Freehold, New Jersey. And — OK — you want me to do what?" Springsteen said. Over the years, both have realized they had more in common than they initially realized. Namely, that they both felt like outsiders. "I always kept one foot in sort of the blue collar world and one foot in the counter culture world," Springsteen said of growing up in New Jersey. "And I never truly belonged completely in either of them, you know?". 28 Sep 2022 Pictured: Michelle Obama. Photo credit: ZapatA/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342 (Mega Agency TagID: MEGA902427_026.jpg) [Photo via Mega Agency]
Image Credit: Shutterstock

The January 6 attack on the Capitol was a shock to so many people, including former First Lady Michelle ObamaThe former FLOTUS recalled watching the events unfold alongside former President Barack Obama in her new book The Light We Carry: Overcoming In Uncertain Times, which was released on Tuesday, November 15. Michelle recounted her fear not only at the violent assault from a mob to try to overturn a free and fair election, but also at former President Donald Trump inciting his supporters.

Michelle reflected on going to watch President Joe Biden’s innauguration, two weeks after the attack, and she said how at the moment, she couldn’t help but remember what she’d seen so soon before. “[The rioters] smashed windows, pounded down doors, attacked and injured police officers, and broken into the chambers of the Senate, terrorizing our country’s leaders and putting democracy itself in jeopardy,” she wrote about the attack. “Barack and I had watched in shock as it unfolded live on the news.”

Michelle expressed her disgust at Trump for inciting his supporters to attack the Capitol. (Shutterstock)

Like so many Americans, the former first lady was disturbed to see not only the violent attack, but Trump’s rhetoric, which only further motivated the crowd. “The events of that day rattled me to the core. I’d understood that our country was grappling with a toxic level of political discord, but seeing the rhetoric tip into reckless, rageful violence aimed at overturning an election was devastating. Watching an American president encourage a siege on his own government was perhaps the most frightening thing I’d ever witnessed,” she wrote in the book.

Besides the January 6 attack, Michelle said that she was disgusted by her husband’s successor from the beginning of his presidency. “It shook me profoundly to hear the man who’d replaced my husband as president openly and unapologetically using ethnic slurs, making selfishness and hate somehow acceptable, refusing to condemn white supremacists or to support people demonstrating for racial justice,” she explained. “stuck in my house over the frightening early months of 2020, I saw no logic to any of it. What I saw was a president whose lack of integrity was reflected in an escalating national death count.”

The former First Lady hasn’t been the only person to rebuke Trump’s actions during the January 6 attack. Besides the investigation by the House Select Committee, which has even subpoenaed Trump, and callouts by President Joe Biden, former Vice President Mike Pence even expressed his outrage in a new interview with ABC News. “It angered me,” he said when asked how he felt about Trump’s tweet calling him out. “The president’s words were reckless. It’s clear he decided to be part of the problem.”

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