The Daily Telegraph

Trump lawyers rubbish impeachmen­t claims

President broke no laws, his legal team tells senators ahead of trial, calling the move a ‘rigged process’

- By Ben Riley-smith US EDITOR

DONALD TRUMP’S legal team have called on US senators to “speedily reject” the impeachmen­t case against him, arguing that he broke no laws, in a submission made just before the trial begins in earnest today.

The 171-page legal brief, which is the most comprehens­ive defence of the US president’s conduct in the Ukraine scandal to date, called the impeachmen­t push a “rigged process” and said he “did absolutely nothing wrong”.

Mr Trump’s lawyers argued that he cannot be guilty of abuse of power – as the first article of impeachmen­t against him claims – because he is not accused of violating any law, unlike past presidents who have faced impeachmen­t.

They attempted to dismiss the second article of impeachmen­t, that Mr Trump obstructed Congress, by arguing that he was fairly using his executive powers when rejecting legal demands for White House officials to testify to the impeachmen­t inquiry.

The submission also contains the first detailed White House explanatio­n for why it was legitimate for Mr Trump to ask for the Ukrainian president to investigat­e claims about Joe Biden, the Democrat he could face at the 2020 election, which was the trigger for impeachmen­t.

Mr Trump’s lawyers said that when Mr Biden, then US vice-president, sought the sacking of a Ukrainian prosecutor who once investigat­ed the gas company his son worked for, there “appeared to be, at the very least, a serious conflict of interest”.

Therefore, the argument went, it was fair for Mr Trump to raise the issue. The Bidens have always denied any wrongdoing. There were also repeated attacks in the submission on how Democrats have pursued impeachmen­t through the House of Representa­tives. They were accused of a “constituti­onal travesty” and “brazenly political act” that is an “affront” to American democracy.

“The Senate should speedily reject these deficient articles of impeachmen­t and acquit the president,” read one part of the document.

“The only threat to the Constituti­on that House Democrats have brought to light is their own degradatio­n of the impeachmen­t process and trampling of the separation of powers.

“Their fixation on damaging the president has trivialise­d the momentous act of impeachmen­t, debased the standards of impeachabl­e conduct, and perverted the power of impeachmen­t by turning it into a partisan, electionye­ar political tool.

“The consequenc­es of accepting House Democrats’ diluted standards for impeachmen­t would reverberat­e far beyond this election year and do lasting damage to our Republic.”

The Democrats have submitted their own lengthy justificat­ion for why Mr Trump should be removed, arguing that he used his presidenti­al powers for personal gain by trying to tilt the election this November in his favour.

Today the Senate trial over removing the president – only the third in US history – will begin in earnest, with votes setting out the rules before the Democrats begin making their case.

The Republican­s hold 53 of the 100 Senate seats and so will decide how the proceeding­s are carried out, providing individual senators do not rebel.

The expected proposal will be that the Democrats get 24 hours, spread across two days, to lay out their case for removing Mr Trump, followed by 24 hours for the president’s legal team to spell out the defence.

There will then be 16 hours of questions submitted in writing by the 100 senators, who will act like a jury. Two thirds of senators ultimately need to vote for removal for it to happen – a very high bar, making it unlikely.

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