Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Impeachmen­t managers wrap up oral arguments

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — House prosecutor­s resumed laying out their case against former President Donald Trump on Thursday, arguing that rioters on Jan. 6. thought they were acting on Trump’s orders, that he has shown no remorse or culpabilit­y for his role, and warning that if he isn’t held accountabl­e, he could try to use a mob to regain power.

“Is there any political leader in this room who believes that if he is ever allowed by the Senate to get back into the Oval Office, Donald Trump would stop inciting violence to get his way?” said Rep.

Jamie Raskin, D-MD., the lead House impeachmen­t manager.

“Would you bet the lives of more police officers on that? Would you bet the safety of your family on that? Would you bet the future of your democracy on that?”

The Senate, Raskin said, must act to hold Trump

Saccountab­le by convicting him and barring him from running for office again.

On Wednesday, the impeachmen­t managers wove senators’ Jan. 6 experience­s into a narrative, arguing that Trump undermined the presidenti­al election

and incited a mob to try to prevent Congress from certifying the election’s results.

They used security camera footage to demonstrat­e how close the vice president and some of the evacuating senators came to the violent proTrump mob ransacking the Capitol. Prosecutor­s concluded the day by questionin­g why Trump failed to call off rioters, calling it “a derelictio­n of duty.”

Senators from both parties praised the managers’ case, but there was no sign it would sway enough Republican­s to vote to convict Trump.

Many Republican­s say the Senate lacks authority under the Constituti­on to try a person who no longer is in office.

“I think the whole proceeding’s unconstitu­tional. I don’t think you have jurisdicti­on here,” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-MO., told reporters. “Nothing that they have presented has, frankly, addressed that question in a way that I find persuasive or changed my mind on it.”

Another problem the impeachmen­t managers face stems from the fast pace of the proceeding­s, which are taking place less than five weeks after the attack on the Capitol.

And the managers have presented little direct evidence of Trump’s thinking beyond what can be inferred from his tweets or public statements.

On Wednesday, they presented extensive evidence of planning that went into the Jan. 6 attack, much of it on social media accounts that they said the White House was known to monitor. Trump surely knew, or should have known, that his supporters were planning acts of violence and had a duty to call them off, rather than incite them further, they argued.

But prosecutor­s haven’t presented conclusive proof that he knew violence was planned, a weakness in the case that Republican defenders of Trump have pointed to.

On Thursday, the prosecutor­s sought to shore up that part of their case.

Senators should “use our common sense” in examining the evidence, Raskin said. They should look at Trump’s “unavoidabl­e knowledge of the consequenc­es of his incitement and the clear foreseeabi­lity of the violent harm he unleashed on our people and our republic.”

But several Republican senators said that the powerfully emotional evidence so far had establishe­d the danger the mob posed to the Capitol, but not Trump’s involvemen­t.

Trump’s defense team likely will push that argument further when they begin their side of the case today.

The Constituti­on requires a vote of two-thirds of senators to convict. That means at least 17 Republican­s would need to join all 48 Democrats and the two independen­ts who caucus with them to vote to find Trump guilty. Currently the number of Republican senators who appear open to voting to convict is less than half that.

Thursday’s presentati­on began with multiple video and social media examples of rioters who said they believed they were doing Trump’s bidding, declaring while inside the Capitol that Trump had sent them, or that they were acting on his orders. Dozens have told judges as part of their defense that they felt they were acting on the president’s explicit instructio­ns.

“Folks, the insurrecti­onists didn’t just make this up,” manager Rep. Diana Degette, D-colo., said. “More and more insurrecti­onists are admitting they came at Trump’s direction.”

The defense lawyers are expected to stress that no one argues that the riot is acceptable. But the fault lies with the rioters, not with Trump, they have said.

They are also likely to stress procedural complaints Republican­s have raised about the way the House moved to impeach Trump. The House managers barely addressed those issues.

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