The Day

Trump team, House Dems duel

Arguments preview those coming when Senate trial starts Tuesday

- By ERIC TUCKER, ZEKE MILLER and LISA MASCARO

Washington — President Donald Trump’s legal team issued a fiery response ahead of opening arguments in his impeachmen­t trial Saturday while House Democrats laid out their case in forceful fashion, saying the president had betrayed public trust with behavior that was the “worst nightmare” of the founding fathers.

The dueling statements previewed arguments both sides intend to make once Trump’s impeachmen­t trial begins in earnest on Tuesday. Their challenge will be to make a case that appeals to senators who will render the verdict and for an American public bracing for a presidenti­al election in 10 months.

The House’s 111-page brief pulled together the private and public testimony of a dozen witnesses — ambassador­s and national security officials at high levels of government — who raised concerns about the president’s actions with Ukraine. Stripped of legalese and structured in plain English, the document underscore­d the extent to which the impeachmen­t proceeding­s are a political rather than convention­al legal process. The Trump team similarly offered a taste of the rhetoric expected to be deployed by the president’s defenders in the Senate.

In their brief, the House managers overseeing the prosecutio­n wrote that it is clear that the “‘evidence overwhelmi­ngly establishe­s” that Trump is guilty of both charges for which he was impeached last month:

abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress.

“The only remaining question is whether the members of the Senate will accept and carry out the responsibi­lity placed on them by the Framers of our Constituti­on and their constituti­onal Oaths,” the brief states.

The Trump team, meanwhile, called the Senate’s formal impeachmen­t summons to the two articles of impeachmen­t “a dangerous attack on the right of the American people to freely choose their president.”

Trump’s legal team, led by White House counsel Pat Cipollone and Trump personal lawyer Jay Sekulow, is challengin­g the impeachmen­t on both procedural and constituti­onal grounds, claiming Trump has been mistreated by House Democrats and that he did nothing wrong.

“This is a brazen and unlawful attempt to overturn the results of the 2016 election and interfere with the 2020 election, now just months away,” the filing states.

The lawyers said Trump “categorica­lly and unequivoca­lly” denies the allegation­s and encouraged lawmakers to reject “poisonous partisansh­ip” and “vindicate the will of the American people” by rejecting both articles.

Trump’s answer to the summons was the first salvo in what will be several rounds of arguments before the trial formally begins. Trump will file a more detailed legal brief on Monday, and the House will be able to respond to the Trump filing on Tuesday.

The House’s impeachmen­t managers are working through the weekend and will be at the Capitol today to prep the case.

The filings came a day after Trump finalized his legal team, adding Ken Starr, the former independen­t counsel whose investigat­ion into President Bill Clinton led to his impeachmen­t, and Alan Dershowitz, a Harvard law professor emeritus who intends to make constituti­onal arguments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States