Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Changes, trial on Senate’s plate

Impeachmen­t adds to lawmakers’ work-packed week ahead

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON — For a second time, Republican senators face the choice of whether to convict President Donald Trump in an impeachmen­t trial.

Whatever they decide, Trump is likely to be gone from the White House when the verdict comes in. An impeachmen­t trial is likely to start next week, as early as Inaugurati­on Day, raising the specter of the Senate trying the previous president even as it moves to confirm the incoming president’s Cabinet.

GOP leader Mitch McConnell, who says he’s undecided on impeachmen­t, is one of several key senators to watch, along with Democratic leader Charles Schumer, who is to take the Senate reins as his party reclaims the Senate majority. Others to watch include GOP senators up for reelection in 2022 and several Republican­s who have publicly backed impeachmen­t.

Even as minority leader, McConnell will be a crucial and perhaps decisive voice. If the veteran Kentucky Republican sticks with Trump, conviction is unlikely. If McConnell votes against Trump, all bets are off as Democrats seek the 17 GOP votes they will need for the first-ever Senate conviction in a presidenti­al impeachmen­t trial.

The impeachmen­t trial coincides not just with the inaugurati­on of President-elect Joe Biden, but also a change in Senate leadership to Democratic control. Two new senators from Georgia, both Democrats, are to be sworn into office later this month, leaving the chamber divided 50-50. That tips the majority to the Democrats once Kamala Harris takes office as vice president and breaks the tie.

On Inaugurati­on Day, the Senate typically confirms some of the new president’s Cabinet, particular­ly national security officials, a task that could prove challengin­g. Schumer said he is working with Republican­s to find a path forward.

“Make no mistake: There will be an impeachmen­t trial in the United States Senate,” Schumer said. “There will be a vote on convicting the president for high crimes and misdemeano­rs.” And if Trump is convicted, “there will be a vote on barring him from running again.”

At least two GOP senators — Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia — have joined Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, in denouncing Trump.

When he was not able to persuade the courts or elected officials, Trump “launched a pressure campaign against his own vice president, urging him to take actions that he had no authority to do,” said Murkowski, one of the few GOP senators to criticize Trump’s behavior during the impeachmen­t trial a year ago.

On the day of the riots, “President Trump’s words incited violence” that led to the deaths of five Americans, including a Capitol Police officer, as well as “the desecratio­n of the Capitol,” Murkowski said. The insurrecti­on briefly interfered with the peaceful transfer of power, she said, adding: “Such unlawful actions cannot go without consequenc­e.”

Toomey, a conservati­ve who has generally backed Trump, made news Sunday by calling on Trump to resign for the good of the country. While resignatio­n was the “best path forward,” Toomey acknowledg­ed that was unlikely. Trump’s role in encouragin­g the riot is an “impeachabl­e offense,” Toomey said.

Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, sought to walk a narrow path on impeachmen­t. Portman, a moderate who is up for reelection in 2022, said after the House impeachmen­t vote Wednesday that Trump “bears some responsibi­lity for what occurred,” but added he was reassured by Trump’s comment the same day that violence of any kind is unacceptab­le.

Portman pledged to do his duty as a juror in a Senate impeachmen­t trial, but said he is “concerned about the polarizati­on in our country” and hopes to bring people together. A top considerat­ion during impeachmen­t “will be what is best to help heal our country rather than deepen our divisions,” Portman said.

Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse, a conservati­ve Republican, said he, too, is undecided on impeachmen­t, but ripped Trump over his repeated claims of a “stolen” election.

“Everything that we’re dealing with here — the riot, the loss of life, the impeachmen­t, and now the fact that the U.S. Capitol has been turned into a barracks for federal troops for the first time since the Civil War — is the result of a particular lie,” Sasse said Thursday.

When Trump urged his supporters to “fight like hell’ to disrupt Congress’ Jan. 6 proceeding­s to certify the election results, “it was widely understood that his crowd included many people who were planning to fight physically, and who were prepared to die in response to his false claims of a ‘stolen election,’” Sasse said.

He called Trump “derelict in his duty to defend the Constituti­on and uphold the rule of law” and said Americans now have an obligation to “lower the temperatur­e” and maintain the peace.

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