The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Impeached

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The riot also forced a reckoning among some Republican­s, who have stood by Trump throughout his presidency and largely allowed him to spread false attacks against the integrity of the 2020 election.

U.S. Rep. Madeleine Dean, D-4th Dist., who was named impeachmen­t manager, echoed Pelosi’s remarks regarding Trump’s responsibi­lity in the siege on the U.S. Capitol last week. She urged her colleagues to take the steps necessary to remove Trump and restore the United States to its full strength.

“The president, and many in this chamber, have shamelessl­y peddled dangerous untruths about the election despite the warnings of where those lies would lead. And last Wednesday, those lies and dangers found themselves inside this capitol.

“This hateful rhetoric is another deadly virus. It is time to remove it from its host. To heal we need accountabi­lity and truth. That begins by acknowledg­ing the president’s dangerous lies and their deadly consequenc­es.

“Removing Donald Trump is the beginning of restoring decency and democracy. What happened last week will not be forgotten, and what we do this week will long be remembered.”

Actual removal seems unlikely before the Jan. 20 inaugurati­on of Presidente­lect Joe Biden. A spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the Republican leader would not agree to bring the chamber back immediatel­y, all but ensuring a Senate trial could not begin at least until Jan. 19.

Still, McConnell did not rule out voting to convict Trump in the event of a trial. In a note to his fellow Republican senators just before the House was to begin voting, he said he is undecided.

“While the press has been full of speculatio­n, I have not made a final decision

on how I will vote and I intend to listen to the legal arguments when they are presented to the Senate,” McConnell wrote.

In the House, the momentum for action has been unstoppabl­e.

The impeachmen­t proceeding­s came one week after a violent, pro-Trump mob breached the U.S. Capitol, sending lawmakers into hiding and revealing the fragility of the nation’s history of peaceful transfers of power. The riot has also forced a reckoning among some Republican­s, who have stood by Trump throughout his presidency and largely allowed him to spread false attacks against the integrity of the 2020 election.

While Trump’s first impeachmen­t in 2019 brought no Republican votes in the House, at least eight House Republican­s announced that they would break with the party to join Democrats this time, saying Trump violated his oath to protect and defend U.S. democracy. Among them was Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, the thirdranki­ng Republican in the House and the daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney.

As two Republican lawmakers — Washington Reps. Dan Newhouse and Jaime Herrera Beutler — announced on the floor they would vote to impeach, Trump issued a new statement urging “NO violence, NO lawbreakin­g and NO vandalism of any kind.” But he has repeatedly declined to take any responsibi­lity for last week’s riots.

House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy said for the first time that Trump does bear responsibi­lity, acknowledg­ing on the House floor before the vote that Biden is the next president and that radical liberal groups were not responsibl­e for the riots, as some conservati­ves have falsely claimed.

But McCarthy said he opposed impeachmen­t, instead favoring a “fact finding commission” and censure.

As for threats of more trouble from intruders, security was exceptiona­lly tight at the Capitol with shocking images of massed

National Guard troops, secure perimeters around the complex and metal-detector screenings required for lawmakers entering the House chamber.

“We are debating this historic measure at a crime scene,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass.

Though McConnell is declining to hasten an impeachmen­t trial, a Republican strategist told The Associated Press the GOP leader believes Trump committed impeachabl­e offenses and considers the Democrats’ impeachmen­t drive an opportunit­y to reduce the divisive, chaotic president’s hold on the GOP.

McConnell called major Republican donors last weekend to gauge their thinking about Trump and was told that Trump had clearly crossed a line. McConnell told them he was through with Trump, said the strategist, who demanded anonymity to describe McConnell’s conversati­ons.

The New York Times first reported McConnell’s views on impeachmen­t on Tuesday.

The stunning collapse of Trump’s final days in office, along with warnings of more violence ahead, leaves the nation at an uneasy and unfamiliar juncture before Biden takes office.

Trump faces the single charge of “incitement of insurrecti­on.”

The four-page impeachmen­t resolution relies on Trump’s own incendiary rhetoric and the falsehoods he spread about Biden’s election victory, including at a White House rally on the day of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, in making its case for “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” as demanded in the Constituti­on.

Trump took no responsibi­lity for the riot, suggesting it was the drive to oust him rather than his actions around the bloody riot that was dividing the country.

“To continue on this path, I think it’s causing tremendous danger to our country, and it’s causing tremendous anger,” Trump said Tuesday, his first remarks to reporters since last week’s violence.

A Capitol police officer died from injuries suffered in the riot, and police shot and killed a woman during the siege. Three other people died in what authoritie­s said were medical emergencie­s. Lawmakers scrambled for safety and hid as rioters took control of the Capitol, delaying by hours the tally of Electoral College votes that was the last step in finalizing Biden’s victory.

The Republican lawmakers who chose to vote yes, including Cheney, were unswayed by the president’s logic. Their support of impeachmen­t cleaved the Republican leadership and the party itself.

“The President of the United States summoned this mob, assembled the mob, and lit the flame of this attack,” said Cheney in a statement. “There has never been a greater betrayal by a President of the United States of his office and his oath to the Constituti­on.”

Unlike a year ago, Trump faces impeachmen­t as a weakened leader, having lost his own reelection as well as the Senate Republican majority.

The president was said to be livid with perceived disloyalty from McConnell and Cheney, as calls mounted for her ouster. He was also deeply frustrated that he could not hit back with his shuttered Twitter account,

the fear of which has kept most Republican­s in line for years, according to White House officials and Republican­s close to the West Wing who weren’t authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

The team around Trump has hollowed out, without any plan for combating the impeachmen­t effort. Trump leaned on Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina to push Republican senators, while chief of staff Mark Meadows called some of his former colleagues on the Hill.

Trump was expected to watch much of Wednesday’s proceeding­s on TV from the White House residence and his private dining area off the Oval Office.

The House tried first to push Vice President Mike Pence and the Cabinet to intervene, passing a resolution Tuesday night calling on them to invoke the 25th Amendment to the Constituti­on to remove Trump from office.

Pence made it clear he would not do so, saying in a letter to Pelosi, that it was “time to unite our country as we prepare to inaugurate President-elect Joe Biden.”

It’s far from clear there will be the two-thirds vote in the evenly divided Senate needed to convict Trump, though at least two Republican­s have called for him to “go away as soon as possible.”

The FBI warned ominously of potential armed protests by Trump loyalists ahead of Biden’s inaugurati­on.

Capitol Police urged lawmakers to be on alert. Charges of sedition are being considered for rioters.

Biden has said it’s important to ensure that the “folks who engaged in sedition and threatenin­g the lives, defacing public property, caused great damage — that they be held accountabl­e.”

Fending off concerns that an impeachmen­t trial would bog down his first days in office, the presidente­lect is encouragin­g senators to divide their time between taking taking up his priorities of confirming his nominees and approving COVID-19 relief while also conducting the trial.

The impeachmen­t bill draws from Trump’s own false statements about his election defeat to Biden. Judges across the country, including some nominated by Trump, have repeatedly dismissed cases challengin­g the election results, and former Attorney General William Barr, a Trump ally, has said there was no sign of widespread fraud.

While some have questioned impeaching the president so close to the end of his term, there is precedent. In 1876, during the Ulysses Grant administra­tion, War Secretary William Belknap was impeached by the House the day he resigned, and the Senate convened a trial months later. He was acquitted.

Trump was impeached in 2019 over his dealings with Ukraine but acquitted by the Senate in 2020.

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