Los Angeles Times

The heated rhetoric cools

Senate sees a change in tone after contentiou­s opening day

- By Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — After a Senate trial opening so contentiou­s after nearly 13 hours that Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. told both sides to cool it, a weary Rep. Adam B. Schiff was perhaps stating the obvious early Wednesday when he admitted, “You’re going to have tempers flare.”

But when lawmakers reconvened later for the first substantiv­e arguments in President Trump’s impeachmen­t trial, Democrats sought to avoid the kind of testy language and partisan free-for-all that had marred the first day and threatened to overshadow their case.

Still, Schiff could not resist adding a dig as he declared a semi-cease-fire.

“The president’s team would like nothing more than to provoke a bitter conflict. We’re not going to let them,” Schiff said. “The facts are damning. We’re going to lay them out in great detail.”

As the lead impeachmen­t manager for the House case, the Burbank Democrat offered an opening salvo to the

Senate that topped two hours, calling up video clips and other visual aids to help him present evidence in a direct, if sometimes moralizing argument — but not impugning the motives of Senate Republican­s.

As the presentati­ons wore on, the House managers, White House lawyers and most senators sought to

embrace a staid, solemn trial — or at least, for some, to stay awake. Forced to stay seated and silent, some scribbled copious notes, read briefing books, made elaborate doodles, or just left the gilded chamber for extended periods.

Before flying back to Washington from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, Trump weighed in with caustic comments that made clear he approved of the first day’s friction. He praised White House Counsel Pat Cipollone for his “great emotion” before denouncing Schiff and Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, another House manager, as “major sleazebags.”

The president suggested he might like an invitation to attend his trial, saying he would “sit right in the front row and stare at their corrupt faces. I’d love to do it.”

But Trump also repeatedly said he would “love” for Mick Mulvaney, his acting chief of staff; John Bolton, his former national security advisor; Michael R. Pompeo, the secretary of State; and Rick Perry, the former secretary of Energy, to testify — before quickly backtracki­ng, saying they could not testify because of “national security problems.” Cabinet members regularly testify to Congress about national security issues.

Other than the president, the rhetoric was markedly cooler than the previous night, when tensions boiled over as Democrats offered motion after motion to call witnesses or make other rule changes — and watched every one fail, most on a party-line 53-47 vote.

At one point Tuesday, Democrats suggested the Senate would be party to a “cover-up” if it refused to subpoena witnesses and documents that the House was unable to obtain during its inquiry.

The president’s lawyers responded angrily, often raising their voices as they decried the process as partisan and misguided, but mostly avoided the central allegation­s that Trump had withheld $391 million in vital military aid to Ukraine for 74 days as his allies sought to pressure Ukraine’s new president to announce a corruption investigat­ion of Joe Biden.

Cipollone accused Democrats of trying to subvert democracy by impeaching Trump, and repeated false claims by Trump and Republican­s that they hadn’t been allowed to participat­e in closed-door deposition­s or call witnesses during the House investigat­ion. The White House had been invited to take part but had refused.

Trump’s personal lawyer, Jay Sekulow, said the president’s refusal to cooperate with the House inquiry was a matter of executive privilege, and that forcing him to reveal informatio­n to Congress about his national security decisions would mark “a dangerous moment for America.”

After Tuesday’s arguments had stretched long past midnight, Nadler, who heads the House Judiciary Committee, accused GOP senators of “treacherou­s” behavior.

“Either you want the truth, and you must permit the witnesses, or you want a shameful cover-up,” he said. “History will judge and so will the electorate.”

That remark elicited groans from Republican­s in the chamber, and Cipollone leaped up to respond.

“The only one who should be embarrasse­d, Mr. Nadler, is you, for the way you’ve addressed this body. This is the United States Senate. You’re not in charge here,” he said.

It prompted a rare chiding from Chief Justice Roberts, whose role presiding over the trial is largely ceremonial. He implored both sides “to remember that they are addressing the world’s greatest deliberati­ve body.”

Schiff downplayed the fiery exchange Wednesday morning, but made it clear to reporters that he, not Nadler, who stood beside him, would respond to their questions. Around the Capitol, some Democrats vented privately about the latenight episode and Nadler’s role in a Senate rules fight that became a toxic exchange.

“Nadler is exactly what the White House lawyers were hoping for — someone who caters to the Manhattan chattering class but is politicall­y tone-deaf about the rest of the country,” said one Democratic Senate aide. “Every other manager has been the opposite of that. But Nadler is what Fox News dreams about.”

Republican­s said they were still livid about Nadler’s remark when they returned to the chamber Wednesday afternoon.

“I am covering up nothing,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said. “I’m exposing your hatred of this president to the point that you would destroy the institutio­n.”

“If the point was to go on for 13 hours to no apparent purpose ... and to alienate the very senators that they’re trying to convince, then I’d say it was a raging success on their part,” said Sen. Josh Hawley (RMo.). “But if the point was to try to convince people, I think they’re off to a terrible start.”

Trump’s critics were similarly unimpresse­d with the president’s lawyers.

“I had assumed the president’s legal team would be reluctant to tell outright lies in front of the chief justice. I was wrong,” tweeted Laurence Tribe, a constituti­onal scholar at Harvard Law School.

“If there’s any unfairness in these proceeding­s, it’s the astounding mismatch between the high skill and preparatio­n of the House managers and the rambling, dissemblin­g and gaslightin­g of @realDonald­Trump’s counsel,” tweeted George Conway, the conservati­ve attorney and vocal Trump critic who is married to White House counselor Kellyanne Conway.

“It’s like the New York Yankees versus the Bad News Bears,” he added.

 ?? Jose Luis Magana Associated Press ?? REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF (D-Burbank), joined by other House managers in the Senate impeachmen­t trial, addresses reporters Wednesday. They argued that President Trump abused his office to “cheat an election.”
Jose Luis Magana Associated Press REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF (D-Burbank), joined by other House managers in the Senate impeachmen­t trial, addresses reporters Wednesday. They argued that President Trump abused his office to “cheat an election.”
 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? TRUMP LAWYERS Jay Sekulow, left, and Pat Cipollone. Cipollone had clashed with House manager Jerrold Nadler after he accused GOP senators of treachery.
Drew Angerer Getty Images TRUMP LAWYERS Jay Sekulow, left, and Pat Cipollone. Cipollone had clashed with House manager Jerrold Nadler after he accused GOP senators of treachery.

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