Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

BOOZMAN URGES colleagues to dismiss impeachmen­t in speech on Senate floor.

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

WASHINGTON — Saying that the House impeachmen­t inquiry had been “hasty, flawed and clearly undertaken under partisan pretenses,” U.S. Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., on Tuesday called on his colleagues to dismiss the case against President Donald Trump and get back to work.

In a speech on the Senate floor, Boozman never mentioned the name of the accused, nor did he utter the word “Ukraine.”

But he referred twice to House Speaker

Nancy Pelosi, suggesting that the Democrat from California had yielded to pressure from the most strident anti-Trump elements.

“Not even a year ago, Speaker Pelosi was still attempting to curtail the push for impeachmen­t within her own party, arguing, and I quote, ‘Impeachmen­t is so divisive to the country that unless there’s something so compelling and overwhelmi­ng and bipartisan, I don’t think we should go down that path,’” Boozman said.

“She was right. And this impeachmen­t process has failed by each of these metrics. It has further divided the country,” Boozman said. “The case is certainly not overwhelmi­ng. And it has been anything but bipartisan.”

Boozman said he had fulfilled his “constituti­onal duty to serve as a juror in the impeachmen­t trial with the seriousnes­s and the attention it demands.”

“Based on the work done by the House — or, maybe more accurately, the work not done and inherently flawed and partisan nature of the product it presented to the Senate — I was skeptical that it could prove its case and convince anybody apart from the president’s longtime, most severe critics, that his behavior merited removal from office,” he said. “After two weeks of the proceeding­s in the Senate, my assessment of the situation has not been swayed nor has it changed.”

In the speech, Boozman warned that the partisan nature of Trump’s impeachmen­t “potentiall­y sets the stage for more impeachmen­ts along strictly partisan lines — a developmen­t that would be terrible for our country.”

And he rejected claims that Republican lawmakers had engaged in a cover-up, saying the allegation “is wrong on the merits and further drags this process down into the rhetoric of partisan, political warfare.”

The impeachmen­t trial, Boozman said, had taken the Senate “nearly to a grinding halt.”

It’s time, he said, to get back to work.

“The average Arkansan, like many other Americans, is looking for results and asking how the elected leaders they have chosen are trying to help make their lives better and move our country forward. They are not interested in the political games and theater that have consumed much of Washington since September,” Boozman said. “It is my hope that we will return to that real, pressing work in short order.”

Lawmakers are scheduled to wrap up the impeachmen­t trial today.

Dozens of U.S. senators besides Boozman gave speeches Monday and Tuesday, explaining how they will vote.

U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., was not among them, a spokesman said. He planned, instead, to submit a statement for publicatio­n in the Congressio­nal Record, the spokesman added.

 ??  ?? Boozman
Boozman

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States