Houston Chronicle

Divisions widen for GOP in Trump’s trial

Impeachmen­t splits Republican­s on whether to stick with or move on from former president

- By Catie Edmondson

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers on Sunday burrowed into dueling positions over the impending impeachmen­t trial of former President Donald Trump, deepening the schisms in an already divided Senate a day before the House will deliver its charge to lawmakers there.

Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, the only Republican who voted to convict Trump in his first impeachmen­t trial, said Sunday that he believed that the former president had committed an impeachabl­e offense and that the effort to try him even after he left office was constituti­onal.

“I believe that what is being alleged and what we saw, which is incitement to insurrecti­on, is an impeachabl­e offense,” Romney said on “State of the Union” on

CNN. “If not, what is?”

But even as Romney signaled his openness to convicting Trump, other Senate Republican­s made clear that they opposed even the idea of a trial and would try to dismiss the charge before it began. Taken together, the comments underscore­d the rift that the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6 and the ensuing fallout have created in the Republican conference, as senators weighed whether they would pay a steeper political price for breaking with the former president or for failing to.

Although the House will transmit the article of impeachmen­t Monday, Senate leaders agreed Friday to delay the trial for two weeks, giving President Joe Biden time to install his Cabinet and Trump’s team time to prepare a defense. But the plan also guarantees that the trial will dominate Biden’s first days in office, and it could inflame partisan tensions even as the president is pushing a message of unity.

Some Senate Republican­s, including Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the minority leader, have grown increasing­ly worried that if they do not intervene to distance themselves from Trump, their ties to the former president could hurt the party’s political fortunes for years.

Others, skirting the question of whether Trump committed an impeachabl­e offense, have argued that holding a Senate trial for a president who has already left office would be unconstitu­tional and would further divide the nation.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., called holding a trial “stupid” and “counterpro­ductive,” likening it to “taking a bunch of gasoline and pouring it on top of the fire.”

“The first chance I get to vote to end this trial,” he said, “I’ll do it because I think it’s really bad for America.”

In an interview on “Fox News Sunday” with Chris Wallace, Rubio compared the transition of power to that of President Richard Nixon.

“In hindsight, I think we would all agree that President Ford’s pardon was important for the country to be able to move forward,” Rubio said, “and history held Richard Nixon quite accountabl­e for what he did as a result.”

Asked if he thought Trump had committed an impeachabl­e offense, Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., called it “a moot point” and argued that pursuing an impeachmen­t trial against a former president would be both unconstitu­tional and a waste of time.

“If we start working on an impeachmen­t, which it looks like we’re going to end up doing, we’ve only got a couple of weeks here in which to work actually through and allow this president an opportunit­y to form a Cabinet,” Rounds said on “Meet the Press” on NBC. “A lot of us would prefer to maybe work through those issues instead.”

Rep. Madeleine Dean, D-Pa., one of the impeachmen­t managers who will try the case against Trump, said Sunday that she expected the trial to “go faster” than his trial in 2020, which lasted 21 days.

“Some people would like us to turn the page: ‘Oh, let’s move on,’ ” Dean said on “State of the Union.” “We must remember, I believe, that this impeachmen­t trial, I hope conviction, ultimate disqualifi­cation, are the very first powerful steps toward unity.”

Dean declined to say whether impeachmen­t managers would include a New York Times report Friday that Trump had considered firing the acting attorney general while in office to wield the Justice Department’s power to try to force state lawmakers in Georgia to overturn its presidenti­al election results. But the impeachmen­t managers have previously signaled that they intend to present a relatively straightfo­rward case, with the siege that played out in public view at the heart of their case.

Romney, citing both the Capitol riot and an hourlong call that Trump placed to the Georgia secretary of state pressuring him to overturn the election results, said the allegation­s already in the article of impeachmen­t “themselves are of a sufficient nature that the American people are outraged.”

The delay to the start of the trial also means that lawmakers will continue considerat­ion of another coronaviru­s stimulus package. A bipartisan group of lawmakers, including Romney, met Sunday with Brian Deese, Biden’s top economic aide, to discuss the administra­tion’s proposed $1.9 trillion bill. Republican­s have largely spurned that offer, balking at the cost.

“I’m open to that discussion. I want to hear what the White House has to say,” Romney said. “But at the same time, I think people recognize it’s important that we don’t borrow hundreds of billions — actually trillions of dollars from the Chinese — for things that may not be absolutely necessary.”

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