Daily Mail

President’s a despot and a cheat, Trump trial is told

- Mail Foreign Service

DONALD Trump was last night branded a ‘despot’ who tried to cheat to win an election as the case against him was set out at his impeachmen­t trial.

Lead Democratic prosecutor Adam Schiff accused the US President of setting up a corrupt scheme to put pressure on Ukraine to help him win the race for the White House in November.

Mr Schiff began his address to the Senate by quoting one of America’s Founding Fathers, Alexander Hamilton, on the need for impeachmen­t as a mechanism to remove a ‘despot’ from office.

He said Mr Trump, pictured, had pushed Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigat­e former vice-president Joe Biden, a candidate in the White House race, and his son on unsubstant­iated corruption charges last year.

He accused Mr Trump of applying pressure on Ukraine by withholdin­g military aid ‘to improve his re-election prospects at home… in other words, to cheat’.

Mr Schiff said the question the Senate faced was whether Mr Trump should be removed ‘because he abused his office and the public trust by using his power for personal gain’. He added: ‘If this conduct is not impeachabl­e, then nothing is.’

He said that if Mr Trump was not removed, future presidents would be invited ‘to operate as if they too are also beyond the reach of accountabi­lity, congressio­nal oversight and the law’.

Mr Trump, who denies any wrongdoing, said yesterday he would ‘love’ to attend his own trial in Washington but his lawyers will not let him.

He arrived back in the US last night from a trip to the Davos business summit in Switzerlan­d, just in time to hear the case against him open in the Senate.

Known for his commentari­es on Twitter, he remained silent for the much of the first day of proceeding­s on Tuesday.

But 11 hours in to a mammoth 13-hour sitting, as the clock struck midnight in the Senate – 6am in Switzerlan­d – the President posted 40 messages in 40 minutes, retweeting support from allies or attacks on the Democrats.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom