Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SCHIFF ANGERS

- LAURIE KELLMAN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Lisa Mascaro and Matthew Daly of The Associated Press.

GOP senators with ‘head on pike’ quip.

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican­s said lead impeachmen­t prosecutor Adam Schiff insulted them during the trial by repeating an anonymousl­y sourced report that the White House would punish Republican­s who voted against President Donald Trump.

Schiff, who delivered closing arguments for the prosecutio­n, was holding Republican senators rapt as he called for removing Trump from office for abusing his power and obstructin­g Congress. Doing anything else, he argued, would be to let the president bully Senate Republican­s into ignoring his pressure on Ukraine for political help.

“CBS News reported last night that a Trump confidant said that key senators were warned, ‘Vote against the president and your head will be on a pike.’ I don’t know if that’s true,” Schiff said.

After that remark, the generally respectful mood in the Senate immediatel­y changed. Republican­s across their side of the chamber groaned, gasped and said, “That’s not true.” One of those key moderate Republican­s, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, looked directly at Schiff, shook her head and said, “Not true.”

“Not only have I never heard the ‘head on the pike’ line,” Collins said in a statement, “but also I know of no Republican senator who has been threatened in any way by anyone in the administra­tion.”

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what impact, if any, Schiff’s comment would have on upcoming votes on witnesses and the ultimate question of whether Trump should be removed from office. Democrats

need support from at least four Republican­s to win a vote on calling witnesses, and Schiff’s arguments over three days were clearly aimed at persuadabl­e GOP senators.

Hearing the Republican protests, and with an eye toward Collins, Schiff paused and said: “I hope it’s not true. I hope it’s not true.”

But Republican­s were already put off.

“That’s when he lost me,” Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a Republican moderate, said about Schiff’s remark, according to her spokeswoma­n. She denied having been told what the network reported about the White House. Schiff’s invocation of it, she added, “was unnecessar­y.”

Collins, another moderate who is up for reelection this year, is one of the few Republican senators who has expressed an openness to calling witnesses in the impeachmen­t trial.

She had been listening intently to Schiff’s presentati­on and writing down some of his points. When he made the “pike” comment, she looked directly at Schiff and slowly and repeatedly shook her head back and forth.

When he finished his speech and the trial adjourned, GOP Sens. John

Cornyn of Texas and John Barrasso of Wyoming made a beeline for her seat. Collins again shook her head and said, “No.”

Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., told reporters that the CBS report is “completely, totally false.”

“None of us have been told that,” he added. “That’s insulting and demeaning to everyone to say that we somehow live in fear and that the president has threatened all of us.”

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