The Daily Courier

Impeachmen­t ritual chance to see how systems differ

Senate trial of Trump expected to start Tuesday

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WASHINGTON — For the third time in U.S. history, the president of the United States will stand trial in a uniquely American hybrid of judicial propriety and partisan politics, setting the sombre Senate ritual of impeachmen­t on a collision course with Donald Trump’s appetite for chaos.

After formally impeaching Trump in an explosive hearing last month, the House of Representa­tives finally named its team of managers Wednesday before voting 228-193 to dispatch the articles to the Republican-led Senate, triggering a solemn display of pomp and ceremony on Capitol Hill.

“This is about the constituti­on of the United States,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as she introduced the seven Democrats tapped to prosecute the U.S. president on charges of abuse of power and obstructin­g Congress, a team led by California’s Adam Schiff, chair of the House intelligen­ce committee.

“He has been impeached; he’s been impeached forever,” Pelosi said. “They can never erase that.”

As it plays out over the coming days and weeks, Canadians more familiar with the Westminste­r parliament­ary system are in for a teachable moment of sorts, said Gerald Baier, a professor of political science at the University of British Columbia.

“This provides the opportunit­y for a lesson in civics, and a better understand­ing of the difference­s between the two systems,” Baier said. “That’s a good thing.”

Unlike in the U.S., where the functions of lawmakers are more independen­t of the executive branch, the electoral fortunes of members of Parliament or provincial legislatur­es are more directly tied to those of their party leader.

“The system naturally provides more discreet opportunit­ies for that kind of review,” Baier said.

“The immediate pressure release valve of a bad executive is that their caucus might keep them, to some degree, in check.”

And while it remains true that the Prime Minister’s Office and cabinet wield a great deal of control and discipline over caucus, particular­ly when sitting as a majority government, the party’s larger interests kick in at a certain point, he added.

“If you go a step too far — if there’s criminal conduct, or abuse of power, or whatever — the party, in its own interests, has to lance that wound.”

Baier cited as an example the clash within the Liberal party that erupted in the early 2000s, when Jean Chretien grudgingly ended his third term as prime minister under pressure from party members to make room for his challenger and political heir apparent, former finance minister Paul Martin.

“There was never any impeachabl­e-style conduct on the part of the prime minister, but he announced his resignatio­n . . . on the basis that pressure had been brought to bear on him in caucus,” Baier said.

“He was pushing the envelope in terms of what he could get away with at that point.”

Minority government­s can also be perilous for Canadian political leaders, as Stephen Harper learned in 2008 when an opposition coalition threatened to topple his Conservati­ves just six weeks into a minority mandate. Harper survived, thanks to a three-month prorogatio­n of Parliament that provided time for the coalition to disintegra­te.

But that’s not the same thing as an impeachmen­t “crisis,” said Jacob Levy, a political theory professor at Montreal’s McGill University. Rather, it’s the Westminste­r system at work.

“There’s no crisis at all when a minority government loses a confidence vote; there’s just an election,” Levy noted. “And the incumbent prime minister might well remain in that office,” as Harper did in 2011.

Next week’s impeachmen­t trial in the Senate — it’s expected to get underway Tuesday, since Monday is a holiday in the U.S. — will also feature some unfamiliar faces.

That includes Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a Democrat from California, who is the only member of the team to have played a role in the other two impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

She was a sitting member of Congress when Bill Clinton was impeached in 1998 and worked for a member of the House judiciary committee as a law student during the proceeding­s against Richard Nixon.

Trump was impeached by the Democratic-led House last month for his role in the alleged push to convince Ukraine to investigat­e Democratic rival Joe Biden, and for allegedly obstructin­g the ensuing probe by Congress.

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