The Arizona Republic

Trial speeds toward finish

Senators reject efforts to hear from witnesses, setting up verdict votes on articles Wednesday

- Lisa Mascaro, Eric Tucker and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON – The Senate narrowly rejected Democratic demands to summon witnesses for President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial late Friday, all but ensuring Trump’s acquittal in just the third trial to threaten a president’s removal in U.S. history. But senators moved to push off final voting on his fate to next Wednesday.

The delay in timing showed the weight of a historic vote bearing down on senators, despite prodding by the president eager to have acquittal behind him in an election year and ahead of his State of the Union speech Tuesday.

Under an agreement approved Friday night, the trial would resume Monday for final arguments, with time Monday and Tuesday for senators to speak. The final voting would be Wednesday, the day after Trump’s speech.

Trump’s acquittal appeared all but set after a hard-fought effort to allow new witnesses was defeated 51-49 on a near party-line vote. Republican­s Susan Collins of Maine and Mitt Romney of Utah voted with the Democrats, but that was not enough.

Despite the Democrats singular focus on hearing new testimony, the Republican majority brushed past those demands to make this the first impeachmen­t trial without witnesses.

Even new revelation­s Friday from former national security adviser John Bolton did not sway GOP senators, who said they’d heard enough.

That means the eventual outcome for Trump will be an acquittal “in name only,” said Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., a House prosecutor, during final debate. Some called it a cover-up.

“They’re about to dismiss this with a shrug and a ‘Who cares?’ ” the Senate’s third-ranking Democrat, Patty Murray of Washington, said before the vote. “The full truth will come out.”

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer called Friday night’s results “a tragedy on a very large scale.” Protesters’ chants reverberat­ed against the walls of the Capitol.

But Republican­s said Trump’s acquittal is justified and inevitable.

“The sooner, the better for the country,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Trump confidant. “Let’s turn the page.”

Trump was impeached by the House last month on charges that he abused power and obstructed Congress as he tried to pressure Ukraine to investigat­e Democratic rival Joe Biden, and then blocked the congressio­nal probe of his actions.

The Democrats had badly wanted testimony from Bolton, whose forthcomin­g book links Trump directly to the charges. But Bolton won’t be summoned, and none of this appeared to affect the trial’s expected outcome.

Democrats forced a series of procedural votes late Friday to call Bolton and White House acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, among others, but all were rejected.

In an unpublishe­d manuscript, Bolton writes that the president asked him during an Oval Office meeting in early May to bolster his effort to get Ukraine to investigat­e Democrats, according to a person who read the passage and told The Associated Press. The person, who was not authorized to disclose contents of the book, spoke on condition of anonymity.

In the meeting, Bolton said the president asked him to call new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy

“I didn’t need any more evidence because I thought it was proved that the president did what he was charged with doing. But that didn’t rise to the level of an impeachabl­e offense.” Sen. Lamar Alexander

Republican of Tennessee who will retire at the end of the year

and persuade him to meet with Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who was planning to go to Ukraine to coax the Ukrainians to investigat­e the president’s political rivals. Bolton writes that he never made the call to Zelenskiy after the meeting, which included Mulvaney and White House counsel Pat Cipollone.

The revelation adds more detail to allegation­s of when and how Trump first sought to influence Ukraine to aid investigat­ions of his rivals that are central to the abuse of power charge in the first article of impeachmen­t.

The story was first reported Friday by The New York Times.

Trump issued a quick denial.

“I never instructed John Bolton to set up a meeting for Rudy Giuliani, one of the greatest corruption fighters in America and by far the greatest mayor in the history of NYC, to meet with President Zelenskiy,” Trump said. “That meeting never happened.”

Key Republican senators said that even if Trump committed the offenses as charged by the House, they are not impeachabl­e and the partisan proceeding­s must end.

“I didn’t need any more evidence because I thought it was proved that the president did what he was charged with doing,” retiring GOP Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, a late holdout, told reporters Friday. “But that didn’t rise to the level of an impeachabl­e offense.”

Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska said she, too, would oppose more testimony in the charged partisan atmosphere, having “come to the conclusion that there will be no fair trial in the Senate.” She said, “The Congress has failed.”

To bring the trial toward a conclusion, Trump’s attorneys argued the House had already heard from 17 witnesses and presented its 28,578-page report to the Senate.

They warned against prolonging it even further after House impeached Trump largely along party lines after less than thee months of formal proceeding­s making it the quickest, most partisan presidenti­al impeachmen­t in U.S. history.

Some senators pointed to the importance of the moment.

“What do you want your place in history to be?” asked one of the House managers, Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., a former Army Ranger.

Trump is almost assured of eventual acquittal with the Senate nowhere near the 67 votes needed for conviction and removal.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., displays his pleasure as he leaves the Senate chamber Friday during the impeachmen­t trial of President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
STEVE HELBER/AP Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., displays his pleasure as he leaves the Senate chamber Friday during the impeachmen­t trial of President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington, D.C.

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