Albuquerque Journal

As Trump prosecutor, delegate gets her say

Black nonvoting representa­tive from Virgin Islands gets the call

- BY PADMANANDA RAMA AND MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — Stacey Plaskett couldn’t cast a vote last month when the House impeached former President Donald Trump. But she can help prosecute him.

The nonvoting delegate from the Virgin Islands is among the impeachmen­t managers selected by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to argue the case that Trump incited a deadly insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol. It’s an extraordin­ary moment that places Plaskett in the center of just the fourth impeachmen­t trial of an American president.

But there will also be a familiar dynamic when Plaskett walks into the Senate chamber, one that she’s experience­d from elementary school through her legal career: being one of the few Black women in the room. Now that Kamala Harris has left the Senate to become vice president, there are only three Black senators left, and they’re all men. The chamber remains overwhelmi­ngly white despite growing diversity in the House.

Like most of the impeachmen­t managers, Plaskett brings considerab­le legal experience to the case, including a stint in the Bronx District Attorney’s Office and as a senior counsel at the Justice Department. She said being asked to join the team was an invigorati­ng way to deal with the catastroph­ic events of Jan. 6, when she and her staff barricaded themselves in her office as the rioters descended on the Capitol.

“My method of handling things like this is to work,” Plaskett said, adding that receiving the unexpected call from Pelosi “really gave me a charge and something to do.”

As impeachmen­t managers, Plaskett and the other Democrats will try to persuade skeptical Republican­s in the Senate — 45 of whom have already voted for an effort to dismiss the case — that they should take the unpreceden­ted step of convicting Trump and barring him from office.

To do so, they’ll have to retell the harrowing events of Jan. 6, when hundreds of people, some bearing racist and anti-Semitic symbols on their clothing, terrorized the Capitol and forced lawmakers into hiding. They intend to link it all to Trump, the man they say is “singularly responsibl­e” for the riot by telling his supporters to “fight like hell” against the certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s victory.

Trump’s rhetoric, Plaskett said, was “an attempt to destroy what I believe America is.”

As a woman of color, Plaskett says, she’ll be speaking at the trial for individual­s who were “particular­ly traumatize­d by what happened on Jan. 6. You know, as an African-American, as a woman seeing individual­s storming our most sacred place of democracy, wearing anti-Semitic, racist, neo-Nazi, white supremacy logos on their bodies and wreaking the most vile and hateful things.”

The trial also gives Plaskett a chance to work alongside Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., the lead impeachmen­t manager, who was one of her law school professors at American University’s Washington College of Law. She called him an “incredible man” and said his ability to “be inclusive, and to tease out and to encourage people to share” has taken her back to those days.

In turn, Raskin said Plaskett was “truly dazzling” as a law school student.

“Other students used to take notes when she spoke, and that was amazing to me,” Raskin says. “She struck me quickly in class as a potentiall­y brilliant prosecutor, and I encouraged her to take that path. I could not be prouder of her career, and adore her even though she has more seniority than me and teases me about that constantly.”

Plaskett was born in the Bronx to parents who moved to New York from the Virgin Islands.

 ?? MELINA MARA/WASHINGTON POST ?? Democratic House impeachmen­t managers, including nonvoting Rep. Stacey Plaskett, D-Virgin Islands, leave the Senate chamber after delivering the article of impeachmen­t against former President Donald Trump on Jan. 25.
MELINA MARA/WASHINGTON POST Democratic House impeachmen­t managers, including nonvoting Rep. Stacey Plaskett, D-Virgin Islands, leave the Senate chamber after delivering the article of impeachmen­t against former President Donald Trump on Jan. 25.
 ??  ?? Stacey Plaskett
Stacey Plaskett

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