Santa Fe New Mexican

Senate split along party lines on impeachmen­t so far

Several still undecided, but Trump will almost certainly be acquitted in vote Wednesday

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — The Senate is so far cleaving neatly along party lines in advance of Wednesday’s virtually certain votes to acquit President Donald Trump on two impeachmen­t charges, with just two or three undecided members even considerin­g breaking with their party.

A leading GOP moderate, Susan Collins of Maine, announced she will vote to acquit Trump, leaving Utah Sen. Mitt Romney as the only potential Republican vote to convict Trump of abusing his office and stonewalli­ng Congress.

Collins said “it was wrong” for Trump to ask Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigat­e his political rival, Joe Biden, but that Trump’s conduct, however flawed, does not warrant “the extreme step of immediate removal from office.” Collins voted to acquit former President

Bill Clinton at his trial in 1999.

More typical of the GOP side was Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who again slammed the impeachmen­t drive of House Democrats as “the most rushed, least fair and least thorough” in history and confirmed that he will vote to acquit Trump.

The trial is cruising to impeach

ment tallies that will fall short of even a majority of the Republican-held Senate, much less the two-thirds required to remove Trump from office and install Vice President Mike Pence.

The final days of the trial have focused attention on a handful of senators in both parties who were viewed as potential votes to break with their party. GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska called the president’s actions “shameful and wrong” in a speech late Monday, but she also derided the highly partisan process. “I cannot vote to convict,” she said, though she also sees blame within the Senate.

“We are part of the problem, as an institutio­n that cannot see beyond the blind political polarizati­on,’’ Murkowski told reporters after her speech.

Other Republican­s, such as Sens. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, Marco Rubio of Florida and Rob Portman of Ohio, also say Trump’s actions to withhold military aid from Ukraine while pressing Zelensky to announce an investigat­ion into Biden and his son Hunter were inappropri­ate, but fell short of warranting his removal from office, especially in an election year.

“The aid went; the investigat­ions did not occur,” Portman said.

Democrat after Democrat took to the Senate floor to announce they would vote to convict Trump, with Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., outraged by the conduct of White House lawyers, who he said performed for an audience of one — meaning Trump — while playing fast and loose with the facts.

“The presentati­on by White House counsel was characteri­zed by smarminess, smear, elision, outright misstateme­nt and various dishonest rhetorical tricks that I doubt they would dare to pull before judges,” said Whitehouse.

West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, perhaps the only Democrat seen as a likely vote to acquit Trump, has floated the idea of censuring Trump instead, though the idea doesn’t seem to be gaining much traction. Sen. Doug Jones, a former federal prosecutor and Democrat seeking reelection in strongly pro-Trump Alabama, told reporters he’s likely to announce his vote Wednesday morning.

No member of either party has indicated yet that they will break with their party colleagues. Republican­s hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate.

McConnell said the two charges against Trump — that he abused his power and obstructed Congress’ ensuing investigat­ion — are “constituti­onally incoherent” and don’t “even approach a case for the first presidenti­al removal in American history.”

The Kentucky Republican opened the Senate with a scathing assessment of the case presented by House Democrats, but he did not address whether Trump’s actions were inappropri­ate or wrong, as some Senate Republican­s have conceded.

McConnell has dodged question about whether Trump’s actions were inappropri­ate. He led an effort last week to deny Democrats any opportunit­y to call witnesses before the Senate, and he has worked closely with the Trump White House in shepherdin­g the case through the Senate.

Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer of New York weighed in immediatel­y after McConnell’s remarks, accusing the Republican leader and his GOP colleagues of sweeping Trump’s misconduct under the rug.

“The administra­tion, its top people and Senate Republican­s are all hiding the truth,” Schumer said. “The charges are extremely serious. To interfere in an election, to blackmail a foreign country, to interfere in our elections gets at the very core of what our democracy is about.”

The Senate is scheduled to vote on the two impeachmen­t articles Wednesday afternoon. Trump delivered his State of the Union address Tuesday night, a platform in which he appeared before Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the powerful House speaker who orchestrat­ed last year’s House impeachmen­t drive.

Also Tuesday on the Senate floor, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., repeated a question that Chief Justice John Roberts, who is presiding over the trial, refused to read last week. Roberts’ staff communicat­ed to McConnell’s staff that he did not want to read the whistleblo­wer’s name, according to a Republican familiar with the situation who wasn’t authorized to speak on the record.

Paul denied trying to out the whistleblo­wer and noted his question didn’t use the word. He questioned whether the whistleblo­wer may have conspired with House staff aides in writing the August complaint that triggered impeachmen­t.

U.S. whistleblo­wer laws exist to protect the identity and careers of people who bring forward accusation­s of wrongdoing by government officials. Lawmakers in both parties have historical­ly backed those protection­s.

The Associated Press typically does not reveal the identity of whistleblo­wers.

Separately, Trump’s approval rating, which has generally languished in the mid- to low 40s, hit a new high of 49 percent in the latest Gallup polling, which was conducted as the Senate trial was drawing to a close. The poll found that 51 percent of the public views the Republican Party favorably, the first time the GOP’s number has exceeded 50 percent since 2005.

 ?? IMAGE FROM VIDEO VIAS ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks Monday on the Senate floor about the impeachmen­t trial of President Donald Trump.
IMAGE FROM VIDEO VIAS ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks Monday on the Senate floor about the impeachmen­t trial of President Donald Trump.

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