The Citizen (KZN)

Trump’s Senate trial delayed so he can ‘mount a defence’

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Washington – Donald Trump’s US Senate trial will begin in the second week of February, days after a fresh impeachmen­t case against the former president is transmitte­d by the House, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said.

The newly announced schedule reflects a deal struck by Senate leaders to delay the substantiv­e portion of the trial for two weeks so that the chamber may conduct other critical business including confirmati­on of President Joe Biden’s cabinet nominees.

The House of Representa­tives impeached Trump for a historic second time on 13 January, just one week before he left office.

Schumer said the article of impeachmen­t will be delivered and read out to the Senate today.

The chamber’s 100 members will be sworn in as trial jurors tomorrow.

The House members assigned by Speaker Nancy Pelosi as impeachmen­t managers, and members of Trump’s yet-to-be-named defence team, will then be given time to draft their legal briefs.

“Once the briefs are drafted, presentati­on by the parties will commence the week of 8 February,” Schumer told colleagues on the Senate floor.

During the two-week interim, the Senate will act on Biden’s Cabinet nomination­s “and the Covid Relief Bill which would provide relief for millions of American who are suffering during this pandemic”, Schumer added.

“Healing and unity will only come if there is truth and accountabi­lity, and that is what this trial will provide.”

Members will deliberate whether to convict Trump on what the US constituti­on describes as “high crimes and misdemeano­urs”.

Trump was impeached on a single charge of “incitement of insurrecti­on” for his role in whipping up his supporters during a speech in Washington on 6 January, the day a proTrump mob stormed Congress and threatened the lives of lawmakers and then-vice-president Mike Pence.

Five people died in the violence, including a police officer.

The delay is the result of a deal Schumer struck with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

McConnell was a close congressio­nal ally to Trump during his term, but he severely reprimande­d the outgoing president for repeatedly seeking to overturn results of the election and for his incitement of protesters, and he left the door open for voting to convict Trump.

But he had sought a delay in the trial until February, arguing Trump needs time to hire lawyers and mount a defence.

On Friday, McConnell appeared to express regret for the Democrats’ speedy timetable.

“As I understand, it must be headed our way on Monday. By Senate rules, if the article arrives, we have to start a trial right then,” he said on the floor.

But the Senate can agree to its own parameters of the trial timeline.

McConnell spoke of the “unpreceden­tedly fast” process in the House, where Trump was impeached in a single day.

“The sequel cannot be an insufficie­nt Senate process that denies former president Trump his due process or damages the Senate or the presidency itself,” he said.

Trump survived a first impeachmen­t almost a year ago when the then Republican-controlled Senate acquitted him of abusing his office to try to get dirt on Biden’s family before the presidenti­al election.

With the Senate now comprised of 50 Democrats and 50 Republican­s, and a two-thirds majority needed to convict Trump, at least 17 Republican­s would have to vote against the former president to secure a conviction.

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