National Post

Democrats’ next move,

HOLDING ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMEN­T CO ULD LEVERAGE FAIR TRIAL, THEY SAY

- Mike Debonis

Agroup of House Democrats is pushing Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other leaders to withhold the articles of impeachmen­t against President Donald Trump, potentiall­y delaying a Senate trial for months.

The notion of impeaching Trump but holding the articles in the House has gained traction among some of the political left as a way of potentiall­y forcing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R- Ky., to conduct a trial on more favourable terms for Democrats. And if no agreement is reached, some have argued, the trial could be delayed indefinite­ly, denying Trump an expected acquittal.

The gambit has gained some traction inside the left wing of the House Democratic caucus this week. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D- Ore., said Wednesday, as his colleagues debated the impeachmen­t articles on the House floor, that he has spoken to three dozen Democratic lawmakers who had expressed some level of enthusiasm for the idea of “rounding out the record and spending the time to do this right.”

“At a minimum, there ought to be an agreement about access to witnesses, rules of the game, timing,” Blumenauer said of a Senate trial.

Another Democrat, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons, said there is “serious concern about whether there will be a fair trial on the Senate side” and acknowledg­ed active talks about withholdin­g the articles.

The notion has been most prominentl­y advocated by Laurence Tribe, a Harvard Law School professor who has advised the House Judiciary Committee on the impeachmen­t process. In a recent Washington Post op-ed, he wrote that “the public has a right to observe a meaningful trial rather than simply learn that the result is a verdict of not guilty.”

Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., has asked Mcconnell to call several Trump- administra­tion witnesses, including acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and former national security adviser John Bolton. Mcconnell has dismissed those requests and signalled that he expects to hold a relatively short trial that will end with a summary dismissal of the impeachmen­t charges.

Republican­s have scoffed at the notion of the House withholdin­g the articles, noting it hardly counts as leverage to deny the GOP the ability to remove a president that the party wants to keep in place. Some aides further argued that withholdin­g the articles would only fuel Republican arguments that Democrats are engaged in a partisan abuse of the Constituti­on.

A spokesman for McConnell, Doug Andres, declined to comment, as did a spokesman for Pelosi, Drew Hammill.

But Democratic leaders may be forced to deal with the issue in the coming days. Blumenauer said he had already raised the issue with Pelosi, D- Calif.; House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D- Md., and other top party leaders.

Speaking to reporters Tuesday, Hoyer did not rule out the idea: “It’s an interestin­g proposal. I don’t think that that’s the path we will follow, but that does not mean we will immediatel­y deliver it.”

A senior Democratic aide who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal deliberati­ons said the impeachmen­t articles will not be immediatel­y transmitte­d to the Senate Wednesday. Rather, they will be held until Pelosi names impeachmen­t managers, the House members who will present the case for Trump’s removal in the Senate.

“There will be a debate and vote on that resolution” naming the managers, the aide said. If a significan­t number of Democrats refuse to vote for that resolution, they could force the issue.

The timing of that vote is unclear; the House is expected to recess for the winter holidays as soon as Thursday and not return until Jan. 7.

Blumenauer said that if Mcconnell does not agree to call the Democratic witnesses and stage a fair trial, Democrats could simply hold on to the articles indefinite­ly and continue to investigat­e Trump. The House is involved in multiple court cases seeking documents and testimony that have yet to be resolved.

“Who knows what would happen to augment the record? This ought to be able to play out,” he said. “There’s no advantage to rushing this.”

But the notion of prolonging the process indefinite­ly is almost certain to infuriate House members from competitiv­e districts, who have pushed Pelosi for months to keep the investigat­ion focused and limited to Trump’s Ukraine conduct.

Blumenauer declined to discuss whether members interested in the gambit would withhold their votes on naming managers to force the issue.

 ?? Kevin Lamarque / Reuters ?? U. S. President Donald Trump exits the Oval Office in Washington on his way to a campaign rally in Michigan on Wednesday as Congress moves to impeach him.
Kevin Lamarque / Reuters U. S. President Donald Trump exits the Oval Office in Washington on his way to a campaign rally in Michigan on Wednesday as Congress moves to impeach him.

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