Medicine Hat News

Trial highlights: Trump grievances and the word ‘fight’

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WASHINGTON

In a whirlwind defence, Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t attorneys aired a litany of grievances Friday, arguing the former president bore no responsibi­lity for the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol while accusing Democrats of “hatred” and “hypocrisy.”

The defence team, which wrapped up its arguments in just over three hours, said Trump was engaged in “constituti­onally protected speech” when he spoke at a rally that immediatel­y preceded the violence on Jan. 6 that left five dead.

Echoing themes often heard in conservati­ve media, they called the impeachmen­t trial a “witch hunt” and accused Democrats of elevating a destructiv­e “cancel culture” to the halls of Congress. They also suggested Democrats were hypocrites for impeaching Trump after some had previously voiced support for racial justice marches last summer, some of which turned violent.

“It has become very clear that House Democrats hate Donald Trump,” said Michael van der Veen, a Philadelph­ia personal injury attorney who is part of Trump’s defence team. “Hatred is at the heart.”

Here are some highlights from Friday’s impeachmen­t proceeding­s:

FIRST AMENDMENT Regardless of what occurred after Trump’s Jan. 6 speech, the former president was simply exercising his

First Amendment right to free speech and can’t be found at fault, his attorneys argued.

“The Senate cannot ignore the First Amendment,” said van der Veen.

Nearly 150 constituti­onal scholars disagree. In a letter signed last week they wrote that “the First Amendment does not apply in impeachmen­t proceeding­s, so it cannot provide a defence for President Trump.”

ANGRY OUTBURSTS Tempers flared during a question and answer session as impeachmen­t proceeding­s stretched into the evening.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independen­t who caucuses with Democrats, tried to pressure Trump’s attorneys to say whether the former president had lost the election — a reality Trump himself has refused to acknowledg­e.

“Are the prosecutor­s right when they claim that Trump was telling a big lie or in your judgment, did Trump actually win the election?” Sanders asked in a written inquiry.

van der Veen bristled and inquired who had asked. Sanders responded, “I did.” van der Veen retorted: “irrelevant.”

“No, it isnt!” Sanders angrily shot back from his desk, adding: “You represent the president of the United States!”

He scoffed audibly when van der Veen avoided answering the question.

Separately, van der Veen at one point complained that the impeachmen­t trial was his “worst experience in Washington.”

“You should have been here on Jan. 6.,” lead prosecutor Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., dryly noted.

INSURRECTI­ON OR NOT? The articles of impeachmen­t charge Trump with the “incitement of an insurrecti­on,” a word that Webster’s Dictionary defines as “an act or instance of revolting against civil authority or an establishe­d government.”

Trump’s lawyers say that’s not technicall­y correct. And they offered some alternativ­e facts to make their point.

“‘Insurrecti­on’ is a term of art,” said attorney Bruce Castor, and it “involves taking over a country” or “a shadow government taking the TV stations over and having some plan on what you’re going to do when you finally take power.”

“Clearly this is not that,” he added.

In any event, Trump still wasn’t responsibl­e for what happened after his speech, Castor said.

Trump’s speech, in which he urged his supporters to “fight like hell,“was actual a call for the ”peaceful exercise of every American’s first amendment rights to peacefully assemble and petition their government for redress of grievances,” according to Castor.

And he suggested that Trump wasn’t literally calling on his supporters to “fight,” but rather get involved in the political process, like supporting primary challenger­s of elected officials they did not like.

FIGHTING

Donald Trump’s defence team attempted to undermine a key Democratic argument: that the former president incited the attack on the Capitol by urging his supporters to “fight like hell” and “go by very different rules” or they “wouldn’t have a country anymore.”

To do so, they played a lengthy montage of video clips during Friday’s proceeding­s, which featured

President Joe Biden and other prominent Democrats repeatedly uttering the word “fight” during public speeches.

“There is a fight in front of us,” Vice-President Kamala Harris said in one clip from November 2019. Another showed Biden talking about taking Trump “behind the gym” to “beat the hell out of him,” like in high school.

The use of the words “fight” or “fighting” is exceedingl­y common in political speech. The effort by Trump’s legal team amounted amounted to an effort to muddy the waters by drawing an equivalenc­e and ignoring his false claims about voter fraud.

Trump used the word “fight” while trying to undermine the outcome of a free and fair election that he lost. And his use of the word on Jan. 6 came after weeks of baselessly claiming the election was being stolen from him.

There was no widespread fraud in the election, as has been confirmed by election officials across the country and former Attorney General William Barr. Dozens of legal challenges to the election put forth by Trump and his allies were dismissed.

Still, Trump’s lawyers said they were making a valid point by highlighti­ng Democrats’ use of the word “fight.”

DEMOCRATS REACT Senate Democrats seemed mostly amused by the defence’s video of prominent party leaders, including

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Hillary Clinton, repeatedly saying the word “fight.”

Though initially stonefaced and impassiona­te, as the minutes ticked by some reacted, particular­ly after their own turn on the screen.

Some giggled, others gasped. Some raised their hands or shrugged.

Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar rolled her eyes. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts fidgeted with a pen during a lengthy section devoted to her. But Sanders, of Vermont, was visibly annoyed.

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