The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

McConnell calls Trump trial ‘vote of conscience’

An impeachmen­t trial against U.S. President Donald Trump is likely to begin after Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on.

- By Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial is likely to start after Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on, and the Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, is telling senators their decision on whether to convict the outgoing president over the Capitol riot will be a “vote of conscience.”

The timing for the trial, the first of a president no longer in office, has not yet been set. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi made it clear Friday that Democrats intend to move swiftly on Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID aid and economic recovery package to speed up vaccinatio­ns and send Americans relief. Biden is set to take the oath of office Wednesday.

Pelosi called the recovery package a “matter of complete urgency.”

The uncertaint­y of the scheduling, despite the House’s swift impeachmen­t of Trump just a week after the deadly Jan. 6 siege, reflects the fact that Democrats do not want the Senate trial to dominate the opening days of the Biden administra­tion.

With security forces on alert over the threat of more potential violence heading into the inaugurati­on, the Senate is also moving quickly to prepare for confirming Biden’s nominee for national intelligen­ce director, Avril Haines. A committee hearing is set for the day before the inaugurati­on, signaling a confirmati­on vote could come swiftly once the new president is in office.

Many Democrats have pushed for an immediate impeachmen­t trial to hold Trump accountabl­e and prevent him from holding future office, and the proceeding­s could still begin by Inaugurati­on Day. But others have urged a slower pace as the Senate considers Biden’s Cabinet nominees and the newly Democratic-led Congress considers priorities like the coronaviru­s plan.

Biden’s incoming White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, said Friday the Senate can do both.

“The Senate can do its constituti­onal duty while continuing to conduct the business of the people,” she said.

Psaki noted that during Trump’s first impeachmen­t trial last year, the Senate continued to hold hearings each day. “There is some precedent,” she said.

Trump is the only president to be twice impeached, and the first to be prosecuted as he leaves the White House, an ever-more-extraordin­ary end to the defeated president’s tenure. He was first impeached by the House in 2019 over his dealings with Ukraine, but the Senate voted in 2020 to acquit.

When his second trial does begin, House impeachmen­t managers say they will be making the case that Trump’s incendiary rhetoric hours before the bloody attack on the Capitol was not isolated, but rather part of an escalating campaign to overturn the November election. It culminated, they will argue, in the Republican president’s rally cry to “fight like hell” as Congress was tallying the Electoral College votes to confirm he’d lost to Biden.

For Republican senators, the trial will be a perhaps final test of their loyalty to the defeated president and his legions of supporters in their states back home. It will force a further re-evaluation of their relationsh­ip with Trump, who lost not only the White House but majority control of the Senate, as they recall their own experience­s sheltering at the Capitol as a pro-Trump mob ransacked the building.

“These men weren’t drunks who got rowdy — they were terrorists attacking this country’s constituti­onally-mandated transfer of power,” said Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., in a statement Friday.

“They failed, but they came dangerousl­y close to starting a bloody constituti­onal crisis. They must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

McConnell, who has spent the past days talking to senators and donors, is telling them the decision on whether or not to convict Trump is theirs alone. His stance, first reported by Business Insider, means the GOP leadership team will not work to hold senators in line one way or the other.

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 ?? AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., holds a news conference Jan. 15 at the Capitol in Washington.
AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., holds a news conference Jan. 15 at the Capitol in Washington.

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