North Carolina lawmaker delivers pizza to National Guard units sleeping in Capitol parking garage

North Carolina lawmaker delivers pizza to National Guard units sleeping in Capitol parking garage

North Carolina Rep. Madison Cawthorn showed his appreciation for the U.S. National Guard units stationed at the U.S. Capitol by delivering pizza to them Thursday night.

National Guard troops who protected the Capitol for President Biden’s inauguration were told to sleep in a parking garage after they were told they could no longer use space within the U.S. Capitol complex.

Outraged by the sight, Rep. Cawthorn posted on social media overnight, “I just visited the soldiers who have been abandoned & insulted by our leaders. I brought them pizza and told them that they can sleep in my office. No soldier will ever, ever sleep on a garage floor in the US Capitol while I work in Congress. Our Troops deserve better.”

Cawthorn represents North Carolina’s 11th congressional district, which includes most of western North Carolina, after winning the 2020 election.
After Cawthorn and other lawmakers voiced their outrage at guardsmen being banished to a parking garage as a rest area, a guardsman told CNN that members of the National Guard were allowed back into the Capitol complex to rest in the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center.

Prior to Thursday morning, several areas throughout the Capitol complex were designated as authorized rest areas where members of the Guard could take breaks from their shifts protecting Capitol. By Thursday morning, all those areas had been cleared out and their designations removed, the Guardsmen said.

“We honestly just feel betrayed,” one guardsman told CNN earlier Thursday, noting that a day before, congressmen had come by for photos with the different National Guards units that came to Washington to support security around the inauguration. “After everything went seamlessly, we were deemed useless and banished to a corner of a parking garage.”

Pictures provided to CNN showed guardsmen sitting or lying down in areas cordoned off with caution tape. Some appeared to be sleeping by resting against concrete pillars in the garage, just a few feet away from parked cars. There was one electrical outlet and one bathroom with two stalls for 5,000 troops, one guardsman told CNN. Though many of the troops in the pictures are wearing masks, some are not, which the guardsman said was against guidance and a serious COVID-19 risk, calling it “totally unacceptable.”

The House Acting Sergeant at Arms, Tim Blodgett, said in a statement Thursday evening he will continue to “monitor the working and living condition of the Guard.”

Approximately 25,000 National Guard troops were called up from all 50 states, three territories and the District of Columbia because of heightened security concerns around the inauguration of President Joe Biden. Many used the café of the Dirksen Senate Office Building, just northwest of the Capitol, as a rest area to relax, charge phones and get wireless internet. But on Thursday afternoon, the guardsmen who spoke with CNN said they could no longer use the cafeteria and could only rest in the parking garage of the nearby Thurgood Marshall Judicial Center.

The National Guard Bureau said earlier Thursday the troop relocation was temporary because Congress is in session.

“The National Guard continues to assist and support the U.S. Capitol Police. As Congress is in session and increased foot traffic and business is being conducted, Capitol Police asked the troops to move their rest area. They were temporarily relocated to the Thurgood Marshall Judicial Center garage with heat and restroom facilities. We remain an agile and flexible force to provide for the safety and security of the Capitol and its surrounding areas,” the National Guard Bureau said in a statement.

U.S. Capitol Police did not directly address the guardsmen’s situation in a statement Thursday evening but instead detailed their understanding of how much “off-campus rest time” guardsmen are given.

“Recently, the Department requested that the troops’ schedules be changed so they work no more than 8-hour shifts to allow for more off-campus rest time post-Inauguration,” the statement said. “The Guard is reviewing the request so that logistics and schedules can be adjusted.”

One week earlier, pictures of National Guard troops resting in the Capitol rotunda also caused an uproar. A spokesperson for the Guard made clear that the troops were not sleeping on duty but were resting between shifts.

“To be clear, this is not where they are lodging when off-duty. Being present is the first step in ensuring the safety of our citizens and our Nation’s Capitol. Our security personnel work in shifts and rest when they can as others stand watch,” a Guard spokesperson said.

Most of the 25,000 National Guardsmen who were brought to Washington to help secure the city through the inauguration will be sent home within five to 10 days, the Bureau said earlier Thursday. Approximately 15,000 troops will return home “as soon as possible,” though the planning and process to begin moving them may take a few days.

There are some agencies requesting ongoing support, the National Guard Bureau said, and approximately 7,000 guardsmen are expected to stay through the end of the month.

 

Source:  WXII.com

Patricia Jones

Patricia is originally from Birmingham, AL, but has lived in the Triad for over a decade, arriving here shortly after finishing her journalism degree from Auburn. She writes mainly on local politics and policies.