NJ Rep. Andy Kim helps clean up Capitol

Water bottles, clothing, Trump flags, even a U.S. flag littered the ground inside the U.S. Capitol after a mob backing President Donald Trump ransacked the building.

New Jersey Rep. Andy Kim walked amid the mess shortly after voting to certify Joe Biden's victory over Trump — and felt the weight of the day wearing on him — when something motivated him to clean up the debris.

"I was just really affected emotionally. I felt this kind of heightened, kind of supercharged kind of patriotism that I just felt take over," he said in an interview.

It was then he noticed police officers putting pizza boxes in trash bags, so he asked for one, too, and began cleaning up.

"When you see something you love that's broken you want to fix it. I love the Capitol. I'm honored to be there," he said. "This building is extraordinary and the rotunda in particular is just awe-inspiring. How many countless generations have been inspired in that room? 

"It really broke my heart and I just felt compelled to do something. … What else could I do?"

The image of Kim crouched down clearing away litter bookended a violent, historic day that saw an angry mob smash through police lines, break windows and wrench open doors as they sieged the building, not long after Trump said at a rally they should show "strength" and fight against Congress' certification of Biden's win.

Timeline of the pro-Trump riot at the US Capitol: How the chaos unfolded

Kim, a second-term Democrat from a district Trump won twice, wasn't looking for publicity, according to one colleague who came upon him and didn't recognize him at first.

"I think it was 1 in the morning," said fellow New Jersey Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski. "There were a couple national guardsmen and I noticed somebody on his hands and knees leaning under a bench to pick something up and it was Andy all by himself, just quietly removing debris and putting it in a plastic bag. He was clearly not doing it for an audience.

"It was for me the most poignant moment of the long night."

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said Kim "represents the very best of New Jersey and our nation."

Tom MacArthur, the former GOP representative from New Jersey that Kim beat in a close race in 2018, was heartened by his successor's action. It was MacArthur who had helped shepherd the GOP effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act through the House and who stood alongside Trump and others at the White House to celebrate, though the effort failed. Kim ran in part on the popularity of Barack Obama's signature health care law.

Kim represents the 3rd District, which stretches from the Philadelphia suburbs along the Delaware River in the west, across New Jersey's pine barrens to seaside Ocean County.

He launched his campaign in 2017, returning to live in the southern New Jersey town he grew up in after a career in Washington and abroad. 

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A University of Chicago graduate and Rhodes Scholar, Kim served from 2013 until 2015 as the Iraq director for the Obama administration's National Security Council.

Before that, he was the Iraq director at the Pentagon within the defense secretary's office. He also previously served as a civilian adviser to generals David Petraeus and John Allen in Afghanistan.

The son of Korean immigrant parents, he became the first Asian-American to represent New Jersey in Congress after he was elected in 2018.

On Thursday, he reflected on how he, a person of color, was cleaning up after people who waved white supremacist symbols like the Confederate flag during the melee. He said he hadn't considered race at the time.

But he thought for a moment and added: "It's so hard because we don't look at each other and see each other as Americans first, whether it's race or ethnicity or religion or political party that's getting in the way of us being able to have that shared identity that forged our country and is necessary for us to be able to continue."

Associated Press reporter Peter Banda contributed to this article.

TRANSCRIPT OF KIM'S REMARKS

I had heard that someone was shot and again, I wasn't sure if that was just one instance of many or what. So I was very frightened for our country, for those of us who are working there. Beyond that, after that I just became honestly very sad. I was just very sad for our nation that we had gotten to this point where we had seen one of the greatest buildings in the world desecrated and see this insurrection that had infiltrated such sacred land in our country.

But what I will say is that I think this kind of leads into why it is I was trying to clean up is when I saw that I was also just really affected emotionally. And I felt this kind of heightened, kind of supercharged kind of patriotism that I just felt kind of really take over as well, that just you really wanted me to just kind of redouble my efforts and my commitment to getting our country on a better path. And so I just felt compelled to do something, to just roll up my sleeves the way our nation was bleeding and we need to find some way to move forward. Certainly part of that was about certifying the vote and then conduct the work of the Constitution of the United States.