Texarkana Gazette

Trump defenders push ‘no crime’ as Dems seek removal

- By Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s lawyers on Sunday previewed their impeachmen­t defense by asserting that the charges against him are invalid, adopting a position rejected by Democrats as “nonsense” as both sides sharpened their arguments for trial.

“Criminal-like conduct is required,” said Alan Dershowitz, a constituti­onal lawyer on Trump’s defense team. Dershowitz said he will be making the same argument to the Senate and if it prevails, there will be “no need” to pursue the witness testimony or documents that Democrats are demanding.

The argument is part of a multi-pronged strategy the president’s team is developing ahead of its impeachmen­t trial brief, which is due Monday. Trump asserts that his Ukraine pressure was “perfect” and that he is the victim of a witch hunt.

But the “no crime, no impeachmen­t” approach has been roundly dismissed by scholars and Democrats, who were fresh off a trial brief that called Trump’s behavior the “worst nightmare” of the country’s founders. In their view, the standard of “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” is vague and open-ended in the Constituti­on and meant to encompass abuses of power that aren’t necessaril­y illegal.

The White House is pushing an “absurdist position,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the lead Democratic prosecutor of the impeachmen­t case. “That’s the argument I suppose you have to make if the facts are so dead set against you.” Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., another impeachmen­t prosecutor, called it “arrant nonsense” and said evidence of Trump’s misconduct is overwhelmi­ng.

The back-and-forth came as all concerned agitated for the Senate to get on with the third impeachmen­t trial in the nation’s history. Behind the scenes Sunday, the seven House managers were meeting on strategy with staff and shoring up which prosecutor will handle which parts of the case. They were expected to do a walk-through of the Senate chamber on Monday around lunchtime, according to multiple Democrats working on impeachmen­t who

spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss plans.

The White House, meanwhile, was working on its response to the House’s brief outlining the charges.

No senators were more eager to get going than the four Democratic presidenti­al candidates facing the prospect of being marooned in the Senate ahead of kickoff nominating votes in Iowa and New Hampshire.

“I’d rather be here,” said Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on New Hampshire Public Radio while campaignin­g Sunday in Concord.

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