The Free Press Journal

TRUMP IS ACQUITTED

- LALIT K JHA Washington

The US Senate has acquitted Donald Trump in his second impeachmen­t trial after falling short of the twothirds majority needed to convict him on a charge of inciting last month's insurrecti­on at the Capitol, even as seven members of the former president's party delivered a historic rebuke by joining Democrats in voting against him.

Trump, a Republican, was accused of inciting riots in the US Capitol on January 6 which left five people, including a police officer, dead.

A majority of senators - 57 to 43, including seven Republican­s - voted on Saturday to convict Trump, 10 votes short of the two-thirds majority or 67 votes required for conviction. Trump, 74, is the first-ever president to have been impeached twice and the first president to have faced impeachmen­t after leaving office.

He was first acquitted by the Senate in February 2020 on charges that he had enlisted the Ukrainian president to try to dig up dirt

on his Democratic rival Joe Biden ahead of the November 3 election. Seven Republican senators -Bill Cassidy, Richard Burr, Mitt Romney, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, Ben Sasse and Pat Toomey -- voted in favour of impeaching him.

If he had been convicted, the Senate could have voted to bar him from running for office ever again. Trump released a statement soon af ter the acquittal, saying "no president has ever gone through anything like it".

"It is a sad commentary on the times that one political party in America is given a free pass to denigrate the rule of law, defame law enforcemen­t, cheer mobs, excuse rioters, and transform justice into a tool of political vengeance, and persecute, blacklist, cancel and suppress all people and viewpoints with whom or which they disagree," he said.

Trump denounced the trial as "the greatest witch hunt in history".

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