The Manica Post

Trump tapes help incriminat­e him

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CAN’T get a new witness? Call Donald J. Trump.

Republican­s might be blocking new testimony in the Senate trial but Democratic impeachmen­t managers keep returning to the person who makes their case better than anyone: the President himself.

Trump, of course, is not literally in the Senate chamber though he said Wednesday he’d “love” to be in the front row to stare at his “corrupt” accusers.

But for Democrats, there’s no better evidence with which to paint a picture of what they say is a self-dealing, obstructiv­e leader with a kingly view of his own powers than the highlight reel already compiled by the most television-obsessed president in history.

“I have, in Article II, where I have the right to do whatever I want as President,” Trump says in one clip aired on Tuesday by lead impeachmen­t manager Rep. Adam Schiff, D-California.

The Trump tapes not only break up hours of dense legal arguments. They also put the President at the centre of the action, portraying him as the ringleader of the scheme to pressure Ukraine for political favours, and not an outsider player.

They also confront the Republican senators, serving as jurors, with the direct evidence of what Democrats say is outlandish, impeachabl­e behavior in a way that may not change their minds but is deeply uncomforta­ble.

Driving home the case for new witnesses, currently being thwarted by GOP senators in multiple votes, Schiff turned to a clip of Trump on December 3.

“When it’s fair, and it will be fair in the Senate, I would love to have Mike Pompeo, I’d love to have Mick (Mulvaney), I’d love to have Rick Perry and many other people testify,” the President said at the time, taking a position at odds with the current arguments of his legal team and Republican Senate leaders.

On Wednesday, Democrats wanted to establish a pattern of behaviour on Trump’s part of soliciting foreign interferen­ce in US elections, as he is alleged to have done in a quid pro quo in Ukraine, as they seek to prove corrupt intent.

So Schiff dug out the famous clip from the 2016 election when Trump called on Russia, “if you are listening,” to find Hillary Clinton’s 30,000 “missing” emails. Last year’s call by the President for China to “start an investigat­ion into the Bidens” also came up, as did Trump’s comment to George Stephanopo­ulos on ABC News that if a foreign power had election dirt: “I think I’d want to hear it.”

As that last clip echoed through the chamber, impeachmen­t manager Rep. Sylvia Garcia, D-Texas, bemoaned the “shocking video” to underline the point.

Every time Trump’s unmistakab­le tones started reverberat­ing through the chamber, the heads of senators snapped toward the screens showing the clips. The President’s lawyers argue that he did nothing wrong in Ukraine, that he acted within his powers and that the Democratic case that he abused his power is “ridiculous” and unconstitu­tional.

Trump contradict­s his own case

The flurry of video underscore­d how Trump’s torrent of verbiage often contains comments that hurt his own interests, come back to haunt him or even appear to openly reveal malfeasant behaviour. After all, this is the President who fired FBI director James Comey in 2017 and then went on NBC News and said his shock move had been motivated by the Russia investigat­ion.

The clips of Trump’s remarks also help shed light on how he manages to so often skip free after behaving in a way that might have downed his predecesso­rs: He does it all in public. Had Trump’s comments on getting election dirt emerged on a secret tape, Richard Nixon-style, they would seem so much more damaging. As House impeachmen­t manager Rep Hakeem Jeffries, D-New York, said Wednesday when dealing with a rough transcript that shows the President putting pressure on his Ukrainian counterpar­t: “The evidence of wrongdoing by President Trump is hiding in plain sight.”

In the internal drama playing out in the Senate, Trump’s greatest hits are being used by Democrats to suggest that his alleged abuse of power seeking political dirt from Ukraine on his potential 2020 opponent Joe Biden is not an isolated act but conduct in keeping with his character.

The videos also add credibilit­y to a case that Republican senators, almost all of whom are expected to vote to acquit the President, are being faced to hear in relentless, repetitive and incriminat­ing detail. Some of it may even be new to them or may contradict their GOP talking points. And Democratic opponents in November know it will be much harder for them to plead ignorance of what the President was up to.

“I think it’s painful for them to keep hearing how the President shook down the President of another country . . . but you know what, this is forcing them to face it. If they turn off their ears, I am really sad for our country,” Hawaii’s Democratic Sen Mazie Hirono said on CNN’s “Erin Burnett OutFront”.

There are few signs, however, that the hours of testimony, also punctuated by clips of other witnesses who took part in House impeachmen­t hearings and are highly critical of the President, are changing the minds of Republican­s, who have insurmount­able political incentives to acquit Trump.

North Dakota’s Sen. Kevin Cramer appeared to be laughing during two clips played by Garcia, including one featuring Trump.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a friend and political ally of the President’s, wore a big smile when Schiff played the clip of Trump urging Russia to find the missing emails.

Sen. John Cornyn of Texas was asked by CNN’s Ted Barrett whether he was concerned by anything that the President was depicted as saying.

“That’s really not the question,” Cornyn replied.

“The question is whether this is treason, bribery or another high crime and misdemeano­ur. I mean, this is the nuclear option under our Constituti­on to remove a duly elected president by the vote of the House and the Senate,” he said. “This is something we should not do unless that constituti­onal standard is met, and I’m struggling to see how that is even close.”

While the President was all over the trial, his legal team apparently has no desire to see the commander in chief in person at their table in the well of the Senate.

“His counsel might recommend against that. That’s not the way it works,” Trump attorney Jay Sekulow told reporters.

“Presidents don’t do that.” – CNN

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