The Daily Courier

Historic impeachmen­t underway

- By JAMES McCARTEN

WASHINGTON — United States senators relived a terrifying day of reckoning for American democracy Tuesday as they began the process of deciding the political future of former president Donald Trump.

An unpreceden­ted impeachmen­t trial began with a chilling 13-minute video compilatio­n from Jan. 6, the day Trump’s most devoted supporters swarmed Capitol Hill and violently disrupted the Senate’s efforts to certify Joe Biden’s election win.

Now-infamous footage of Trump’s fateful speech outside the White House — “if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore,” he said — was interlaced with jarring, profanity-laced clips from the ensuing melee.

The video included closed-circuit images from inside the very chamber where senators sat and watched it Tuesday — images that captured their own fear and frantic escape to safety.

“Our case is based on cold, hard facts,” said lead impeachmen­t manager Rep. Jamie Raskin, who closed with an emotional account of how his grieving family was on the Hill that day.

Raskin’s 25-year-old son Tommy died last month, and his funeral was the day before the riot, he explained. His 24-yearold daughter and his son-in-law were with him on Jan. 6, despite the plans of Trump supporters to march on the Capitol.

“They asked me directly, ‘Would it be safe?’ And I told them, ‘Of course it should be safe. This is the Capitol,’” Raskin said.

They rode out the chaos hiding under Raskin’s desk, in the care of his chief of staff, “placing what they thought were their final texts and whispered phone calls to say their goodbyes,” he said, fighting tears.

“They thought they were gonna die.” When he wasn’t playing on emotions or rekindling bad memories, Raskin poked holes in Trump’s principal argument that a former president can’t be convicted on an article of impeachmen­t.

That, he argued, would codify a “January exception,” giving every sitting president free licence to do what they like in the final weeks of their term in office, without fear of repercussi­ons.

“It’s an invitation to the president to take his best shot at anything he may want to do on his way out the door, including using violent means to lock that door — to hang on to the Oval Office at all costs.”

Bruce Castor Jr., Trump’s lead counsel, took the podium in the afternoon, framing the impeachmen­t effort as an assault on his client’s first-amendment right to free speech.

“This trial is not about trading liberty for security,” Castor said. “It’s about suggesting it is a good idea that we give up those liberties that we have so long fought for.”

Article 14 of the constituti­on, which addresses insurrecti­on, was clearly written to deal with former Confederat­e supporters who have been convicted in a court of law, he said.

The constituti­on also clearly states that a president who is convicted on an article of impeachmen­t “shall be removed from office,” he added.

“What is so hard about those words to understand?” Castor said.

“President Trump is no longer in office. The object of the constituti­on has been achieved. He was removed by the voters.”

David Schoen, a former lawyer for pardoned Trump operative Roger Stone, dismissed Raskin’s video as an exercise in manipulati­on and the trial itself as a partisan bid to remove the former president from the political landscape forever.

If Trump is convicted, an outcome that needs 57 of the 100 senators to vote to support it, the Senate would then proceed to vote on whether to permanentl­y bar him from ever running again.

“A great many Americans see this process for exactly what it is: a chance by a group of partisan politician­s seeking to eliminate Donald Trump from the American political scene,” he said.

“They hated the results of the 2016 election and want to use this impeachmen­t process to further their political agenda.”

Trump is not just the only U.S. president to be impeached twice. He’s also the only one ever to stand trial in the Senate after relinquish­ing office.

“It is hard to imagine a clearer example of how a president could abuse his office, inciting violence against a coequal branch of government while seeking to remain in power after losing an election,” said impeachmen­t manager Rep. Joe Neguse.

“Presidents can’t inflame insurrecti­on in their final weeks and then walk away like nothing happened.”

However, since conviction needs a two-thirds vote in a Senate evenly split 50-50 between Democrats and Republican­s, the odds of Trump becoming the first former president to be convicted are long.

And when it comes to impeaching Trump, Americans seem to be just as divided as the Senate, a new poll suggests.

The online Leger poll, conducted last month for the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies, found 49% of U.S. respondent­s supported impeachmen­t.

Forty per cent said they opposed it, while 11% said they didn’t know.

Of the U.S. respondent­s to the poll, 54% said they would like to see Trump banned from a 2024 run, while 39% said he should be allowed to seek the job again.

Online polls cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

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