Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Closing arguments target history

Acquittal expected in Wednesday vote

- Lisa Mascaro and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON – Closing arguments Monday in President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial were directed more toward history than to sway the outcome, one final chance to influence public opinion and set the record ahead of his expected acquittal in the Republican-led Senate.

The House prosecutor­s drew on the Founding Fathers and common sense to urge senators – and Americans – to see that Trump’s actions were not isolated but a pattern of behavior that, left unchecked, would allow him to “cheat”’ in the 2020 election.

Democrat Rep. Adam Schiff implored those few Republican senators who have acknowledg­ed Trump’s wrongdoing in the Ukraine matter to prevent a “runaway presidency” and stand up to say “enough.”

“For a man like Donald J. Trump, they gave you a remedy and meant for you to use it. They gave you an oath, and they meant for you to observe it,” Schiff said. “We have proven Donald Trump guilty. Now do impartial justice and convict

him.”

The president’s defense countered that Democrats have been out to impeach Trump since the start of his presidency, nothing short of an effort to undo the 2016 election and to try to shape the next one, as primary voting began Monday in Iowa.

“Leave it to the voters to choose,” said White House counsel Pat Cipollone.

He called for an end to the partisan “era of impeachmen­t.”

All that’s left, as the Senate prepares to vote Wednesday on whether Trump abused power and obstructed Congress, is for Americans to decide now and in the November election where they stand, as the third presidenti­al impeachmen­t trial in the nation’s history comes to a close.

Most senators acknowledg­e the House case managers essentiall­y have proved their case. Trump was impeached in December on two charges: that he abused his power like no other president in history when he pushed Ukraine to investigat­e rival Democrats, and he then obstructed Congress by instructin­g aides to defy House subpoenas.

But key Republican­s have decided the president’s actions toward Ukraine do not rise to the level of an offense that warrants the political upheaval of conviction and removal from office. His acquittal in Wednesday’s vote is all but assured.

Republican Sens. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Marco Rubio of Florida and Rob Portman of Ohio are among those who acknowledg­ed the inappropri­ateness of Trump’s actions, but said they would not vote to hear more testimony or to convict.

“What message does that send?” asked Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., a House prosecutor. He warned senators that for Trump, the “past is prologue.” He urged the Senate to realize a failure to convict will “allow the president’s misconduct to stand.”

The Senate proceeding­s are set against a sweeping political backstop, as voters in Iowa on Monday are choosing presidenti­al Democratic primary candidates and Trump is poised to deliver his State of the Union address Tuesday.

It is unclear if any Republican or Democratic senators sworn to do “impartial justice” will break from party lines. One centrist Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin, W-Va., said he was heavily weighing the vote ahead. He suggested censure may be a bipartisan alternativ­e.

The case managers unveiled a striking case centered on Trump’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, running an alternativ­e foreign policy that drew alarm at the highest levels. As part of the “scheme,” Trump held up $391 million in U.S. aid from Ukraine, a fragile ally battling Russia, for his personal political gain, they argued. The money was eventually released after Congress intervened.

As Chief Justice John Roberts presided, the House managers opened with a plea from Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., a freshman and former Army Ranger: “We cannot and should not leave our common sense at the door.”

One by one, the Democrats drew on their life experience­s to remind senators, and Americans, of the simple difference between right and wrong in the case against Trump.

Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., a former police chief, argued that the president is not behaving like someone who is innocent. She warned that if senators do not convict, Trump would try to “cheat” again.

“You will send a terrible message to the nation that one can get away with abuse of power, cheating and spreading of false narratives,” she told them.

Before Trump’s celebrity defense team mounted its closing argument, the president himself already registered his views on Twitter, where he decried the whole thing – as he often does – as a “hoax.”

Kenneth Starr, the former prosecutor whose investigat­ion led to Bill Clinton’s impeachmen­t, complained about the inadequacy of the House prosecutor­s’ “fast track” case.

Trump attorney Jay Sekulow showed political clips of Democrats calling for impeachmen­t – with many lawmakers of color, including Alexandria OcasioCort­ez, a top Republican foil – to argue this was the “first totally partisan presidenti­al impeachmen­t in our nation’s history, and it should be our last.”

One key Trump lawyer, Alan Dershowitz, who was forced to walk back a sweeping defense of presidenti­al power in last week’s arguments, did not appear.

Trump had wanted acquittal secured before he arrives at the Capitol for the State of the Union address Tuesday. But Senators carrying the power of their votes to the history books wanted additional time to make their own arguments, in public speeches from the floor of the Senate. Those began Monday afternoon and were expected to continue until Wednesday’s vote.

The trial unfolded over nearly two weeks and reached a decisive moment last Friday when senators voted against calling witnesses and documents. Key Republican­s said they had heard enough. It becomes the first impeachmen­t trial in the nation’s more than 200-year history without any witnesses.

Even new revelation­s from former national security adviser John Bolton, whose forthcomin­g book reportedly gives a firsthand account of Trump trying to force the investigat­ions, did not impress upon senators the need for more testimony.

Bolton said he would appear if he received a subpoena, but GOP senators said the House should have issued the summons and the Senate did not want to prolong the proceeding­s.

Prosecutor­s relied on a 28,000-page report compiled over three months of proceeding­s in the Democratic-controlled House, including public and private testimony from 17 witnesses, among them current and former ambassador­s and national security officials with close proximity to the Ukraine dealings.

The case stems from Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine that he maintains was “perfect.” A government whistleblo­wer alarmed by the call filed a complaint that sparked the inquiry.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? Jay Sekulow, left, personal attorney to President Donald Trump, and White House counsel Pat Cipollone arrive for closing arguments.
ALEX BRANDON/AP Jay Sekulow, left, personal attorney to President Donald Trump, and White House counsel Pat Cipollone arrive for closing arguments.

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