Gulf Times

Republican­s who voted to convict Trump face backlash

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Former president Donald Trump’s acquittal on charges of inciting a deadly attack on the US Capitol left Democrats and Republican­s deeply divided yesterday even as his Democratic successor, Joe Biden, sought to move on with his political and economic agenda.

Democrats said they looked to the courts for possible civil and criminal charges against the former Republican president over the assault by his supporters on January 6, which left five people dead.

The senate trial concluded on Saturday with a 57-43 vote in favour of convicting Trump, falling short of the two-thirds majority needed to do so.

Of the seven Republican­s who joined the senate’s 48 Democrats and two independen­ts in voting to convict, some faced swift backlash in their home states.

Senator Bill Cassidy yesterday said he believed more of his constituen­ts would come to agree with his vote over time as the facts became known.

Republican party leaders in Cassidy’s home state of Louisiana voted on Saturday to censure him. “I have the privilege of having the facts before me. As these facts become more and more out there...and folks have a chance to look themselves, more folks will move to where I was,” Cassidy told ABC’s This Week when asked about the censure.

“I’m attempting to hold President Trump accountabl­e...I am very confident as time passes, people will move to that position,” Cassidy said.

The party leader in Pennsylvan­ia

also criticised its Republican senator Pat Toomey for voting to convict.

“The vote to acquit was the constituti­onally correct outcome,” Pennsylvan­ia Republican chairman Lawrence Tabas said in a statement.

Cassidy declined to say whether Trump should face criminal charges.

But Democratic senator Chris Coons told ABC he thought this could happen.

“I think there’s ground for further proceeding­s, both civil and criminal, against former president Trump,” Coons said.

Coons said the country needed to set up a 9/11-style commission to investigat­e the events of January 6. But he believed the senate trial “reached its natural conclusion” on Saturday.

The assault on the Capitol forced lawmakers to evacuate congressio­nal chambers in fear for their safety in the middle certifying Biden’s win in the November election, which Trump falsely maintained he lost due to widespread electoral fraud.

Biden, who took office on January 20, appealed for unity to “heal this uncivil war and heal the very soul of our nation,” saying each American had a duty and a responsibi­lity to defend the truth.

“This sad chapter in our history has reminded us that democracy is fragile. That it must always be defended. That we must be ever vigilant. That violence and extremism has no place in America,” Biden said in a statement.”That is the task ahead. And it’s a task we must undertake together. As the United States of America.”

Trump, while hailing the acquittal, called the House impeachmen­t and trial in the senate a “witch hunt.”

Trump is the only president in US history to be impeached twice. Democratic speaker of the House of Representa­tives Nancy Pelosi called Republican­s who did not support conviction “cowardly.”

Biden, who stayed largely out of the fray during the impeachmen­t proceeding­s, is eager to pass a $1.9tn pandemic relief bill and have the remaining nominees for his Cabinet confirmed by the Senate.

But lawmakers’ disagreeme­nts are likely to linger.

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