In the run-up to the
2020 United States presidential election, the WalkAway campaign held
rallies and marches in various cities, an effort to get people to vote for President
Donald Trump. In August 2019, Straka opened for Trump at a rally in
Cincinnati. In August 2020, the WalkAway campaign held a
rally in
West Hollywood, California. Nearly 300 demonstrators attended, including
YouTuber Joy Villa. Many held flags and signs supportive of Trump and critical of the Democratic Party. On September 5, the campaign held a rally in
Dallas, Texas, during which a
Black Lives Matter counter-protester was arrested for
misdemeanor assault. On October 3, 2020, Straka held a rally in
Washington, D.C. at the Sylvan Theater on the grounds of the
Washington Monument. Featured speakers included
U.S. Representative Dan Crenshaw, actor
Lorenzo Lamas, and British social media influencer
Katie Hopkins. He remained active after the 2020 election. In 2025, the WalkAway Campaign launched the American Restoration Tour to encourage voters to leave the
Democratic Party and support conservative candidates, targeting states like
California,
New Jersey, and
Virginia. On April 27, 2025, a rally was held in
Beverly Hills, California, with speakers including former
U.S. Representative Matt Gaetz, conservative media influencer
Jairo Tomico and musician
Cherie Currie. The event aimed to mobilize voters for future elections.
Straka's participation in the 2021 Capitol attack Straka attended the
2021 United States Capitol attack and spoke to crowds on January 5 where he referred to the audience as "patriots" and referred repeatedly to a "revolution." He also told the attendees to "fight back" and added, "We are sending a message to the Democrats, we are not going away, you've got a problem!" On January 8,
Facebook closed the #WalkAway page, which had more than half a million followers at the time. The page was replaced with a message from Facebook saying the page had violated its terms of use. The shutdown came in the wake of the Capitol attack, when Facebook and other social media platforms increased their enforcement of terms of service that ban the incitement of violence. Facebook said the page violated a policy on content that was, "hateful, threatening, or obscene". On January 25, Straka was arrested in Nebraska by the
FBI for "impeding law enforcement officers during civil disorder" and unlawful entry into a restricted building, as well as disorderly conduct in relation to his role in the violent disturbance. He pleaded guilty to a lesser
misdemeanor charge in October 2021, which could be punishable by up to six months in prison, and agreed to provide private social media and other evidence to investigators. Prosecutors postponed Straka's December 2021 sentencing for thirty days to evaluate evidence he had provided. Straka was later sentenced to three years
probation for his role in the Capitol riot. Straka attended the
Conservative Political Action Conference in 2022, where he appeared in a cage wearing an orange jumpsuit despite never serving time in jail for the Capitol attack. At one point U.S. Representative
Marjorie Taylor Greene entered the cage and prayed with him. He also made an appearance at
CPAC 2023; alongside fellow rioters
Derrick Evans and
Simone Gold, he was a speaker at a session titled "
True Stories of January 6: The Prosecuted Speak". In January 2025, Straka was
pardoned, along with others convicted for their Jan. 6 offenses, by President Donald Trump on the first day of
his second presidency. == Reactions ==