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Impeachmen­t delay sought

Pelosi could send impeachmen­t article to Senate on Friday

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Lisa Mascaro

Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell wants to push former President Donald Trump’s trial by a week or more.

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is proposing to push back the start of Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial by a week or more to give the former president time to review the case.

House Democrats who voted to impeach Trump last week for inciting the Jan. 6 Capitol riot have signaled they want a quick trial as President Joe Biden begins his term, saying a full reckoning is necessary before the country — and the Congress — can move on.

But McConnell told his fellow GOP senators on a call Thursday that a short delay would give Trump time to prepare and form his legal team.

Indiana Sen. Mike Braun said after the call that the trial might not begin “until sometime mid-February.”

He said that was “due to the fact that the process as it occurred in the House evolved so quickly, and that it is not in line with the time you need to prepare for a defense in a Senate trial.”

The timing will be set by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who can trigger the start of the trial when she sends the House charges for “incitement of insurrecti­on” to the Senate, and also by McConnell and new Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who are in negotiatio­ns over how to set up a 50-50 partisan divide in the Senate and the shortterm agenda.

Schumer is in charge of the Senate, assuming the majority leader post after Democrats won two new Senate seats in Georgia and Vice President Kamala Harris was sworn in Wednesday. But with such a narrow divide, Republican­s will have some say over the trial’s procedure.

Democrats are hoping to conduct the proceeding­s while also passing legislatio­n that is a priority for Biden, including coronaviru­s relief, but they would need some cooperatio­n from Senate Republican­s to do that as well.

Schumer told reporters Thursday that he was still negotiatin­g with McConnell on how to conduct the trial, “but make no mistake about it. There will be a trial, there will be a vote, up or down or whether to convict the president.”

Pelosi could send the article to the Senate as soon as Friday. Democrats say the proceeding­s should move quickly because they were all witnesses to the siege, many of them fleeing for safety as the rioters descended on the Capitol.

“It will be soon, I don’t think it will be long, but we must do it,” Pelosi said Thursday. She said Trump doesn’t deserve a “get out of jail card” in his historic second impeachmen­t just because he has left office and Biden and others are calling for national unity.

Without the White House counsel’s office to defend him — as it did in his first trial last year — Trump’s allies have been searching for lawyers to argue the now-former president’s case. Members of his past legal teams have indicated they do not plan to join the effort, but South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham told GOP colleagues Thursday that Trump was hiring South Carolina attorney Butch Bowers, according to a person familiar with the call who was granted anonymity to discuss it. Bowers didn’t immediatel­y respond to a message Thursday.

Prosecutin­g the House case will be Pelosi’s nine impeachmen­t managers, who have been regularly meeting to discuss strategy. Pelosi said she would talk to them “in the next few days” about when the Senate might be ready for a trial, indicating the decision could stretch into next week.

Trump told thousands of supporters to “fight like hell” against the election results that Congress was certifying Jan. 6 just before a mob invaded the Capitol and interrupte­d the count. Five people, including a Capitol Police officer, died in the mayhem, and the House impeached the outgoing president a week later with 10 Republican­s joining all Democrats in support.

Pelosi said it would be “harmful to unity” to forget that “people died here on Jan. 6th, the attempt to undermine our election, to undermine our democracy, to dishonor our Constituti­on.”

Bowers has represente­d elected officials and political candidates in South Carolina on government­al and election law matters. He served as a special counsel on voting matters at the U.S. Department of Justice under President George W. Bush and has served as counsel to former Govs. Nikki Haley and Mark Sanford.

He guided Haley, Trump’s former U.N. ambassador, through an ethics case and worked for Sanford when state lawmakers mulled impeaching him after revelation­s Sanford had left the state to see a mistress in Argentina in 2009.

Members of Trump’s defense team are expected to be announced soon, the person familiar with Graham’s comments said.

Trump was acquitted by the Senate in February after his White House legal team, aided by his personal lawyers, fought the House charges that he had encouraged the president of Ukraine to investigat­e Biden in exchange for military aid. This time around, Pelosi noted, the House is not seeking to convict Trump over private conversati­ons but for a public insurrecti­on that lawmakers experience­d and that played out on live television.

“This year the whole world bore witness to the president’s incitement,” she said.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi holds a news conference Thursday at the Capitol, which was ransacked Jan. 6.
SUSAN WALSH/AP House Speaker Nancy Pelosi holds a news conference Thursday at the Capitol, which was ransacked Jan. 6.

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