Cape Breton Post

Incitement charge launches Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial

- SUSAN CORNWELL

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House of Representa­tives was all set Monday to formally charge ex-President Donald Trump with inciting insurrecti­on in a fiery speech to his followers before this month's deadly attack on the Capitol, signaling the start of his second impeachmen­t trial.

Nine House Democrats who will serve as prosecutor­s were to proceed through the building where hundreds of Trump supporters fought with police, leaving five dead, at about 7 p.m. Monday evening, carrying the article of impeachmen­t to the Senate where Trump will face trial. A similar ceremony was carried out for Trump's first impeachmen­t trial last January, when the House clerk and sergeant at arms led a small procession of lawmakers through a hushed Capitol.

It will mark two historic firsts — Trump is the only U.S. president to have been impeached by the House twice and will be the first to face trial after leaving office. Conviction in the Senate could result in a vote to ban him from holding future office.

Leaders of the Senate, which is divided 50-50 with Democrats holding a majority because of the tie-breaking vote of Vice President Kamala Harris, have agreed not to start the trial until Feb. 9. That gives Trump more time to prepare a defense and allows the chamber to focus on President Joe Biden's early priorities, including Cabinet appointmen­ts.

After a two-month campaign to try to discredit his election defeat, Trump on Jan. 6 urged his followers to “fight” to overturn the result. A mob later descended on the Capitol, sending lawmakers into hiding and for several hours delaying Congress' formal certificat­ion of

Biden's victory.

Ten House Republican­s joined Democrats in voting to impeach Trump, a step akin to an indictment in a criminal trial. Senate Democrats will need the support of 17 Republican­s to convict him, a steep climb given Trump's continued popularity with Republican voters.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll on Friday found that 51 per cent of Americans thought the Senate should convict Trump. That largely broke down along party lines, with less than two in 10 Republican­s agreeing.

Multiple Republican­s, including the party's Senate leader, Mitch McConnell, have condemned the violence and criticized Trump for inciting it. Republican Senator Mitt Romney told CNN on Sunday that the trial was necessitat­ed by Trump's inflammato­ry call to his supporters.

“I believe that what is being alleged and what we saw, which is incitement to insurrecti­on, is an impeachabl­e offense. If not, what is?” said Romney, a frequent Trump critic and the only Republican to vote to convict him at his first impeachmen­t trial. But a significan­t number of Republican lawmakers have raised objections to the impeachmen­t. Senator Marco Rubio pronounced the trial “stupid” and “counterpro­ductive” on “Fox News Sunday.”

“We already have a flaming fire in this country and it's like taking a bunch of gasoline and pouring it on top of the fire,” Rubio said.

The case is a simpler one than Trump's first impeachmen­t, which focused on a phone call with Ukraine's president that was disclosed by a whistleblo­wer. In this case, the actions in question played out in a public speech and a separate phone call to a Georgia election official that was released to the news media.

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