Los Angeles Times

Trump lawyers deride House charges

Responding to Senate impeachmen­t trial summons, they denounce Democrats’ case as ‘defective.’

- By Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s legal team on Saturday accused the House of a “brazen and unlawful attempt” to overturn the 2016 election in a scathing response to the impeachmen­t trial summons issued by the Senate ahead of its trial to decide whether to remove the president from office.

The House, in a separate 111-page brief filed Saturday, countered by calling Trump’s alleged attempt to involve a foreign power in the 2020 election — the issue at the base of the House impeachmen­t — the exact reason the framers of the Constituti­on added such a drastic remedy to check abuses by the executive branch.

The filings were the first of several arguments Trump’s lawyers and House managers are expected to file before the Senate formally begins the impeachmen­t trial Tuesday, giving a taste of the harsh rhetoric expected for the next several weeks in only the third presidenti­al impeachmen­t trial in U.S. history.

The Senate has not agreed on a set of rules to govern the trial, such as how long each side gets to speak and whether witnesses will

be called. It could be Wednesday before arguments begin on the merits of the two articles of impeachmen­t.

The House last month voted largely along party lines to impeach Trump on two counts: abuse of power for withholdin­g military aid to Ukraine and a coveted White House meeting unless the newly elected president of Ukraine opened investigat­ions into Trump’s political rivals, and obstructio­n of Congress for blocking current and former federal employees from producing documents or testifying as part of the House investigat­ion.

The president’s sevenpage filing argues that the articles “violate the Constituti­on,” are “defective in their entirety” and should not be considered valid because they don’t cite a specific federal law that has been broken.

Most constituti­onal scholars agree that the term “high crimes and misdemeano­rs,” which appears in the impeachmen­t clause in the Constituti­on, does not refer to a violation of federal criminal statutes, but to a crime against the American public at large, and that it is up to Congress to determine what qualifies.

Beyond letters to Speaker Nancy Pelosi (DSan Francisco), the president and his lawyers explicitly refused an invitation to participat­e in the House investigat­ion and impeachmen­t hearings, saying the process was unfair.

Their filing to the Senate on Saturday, a day after naming five outside lawyers to the president’s defense team, marks the first time they’ve fully engaged and given a sense of their legal strategy.

Trump’s legal team, led by White House Counsel Pat Cipollone and Trump personal lawyer Jay Sekulow, challenged the House impeachmen­t on both procedural and constituti­onal grounds.

The filing says Trump was mistreated by House

Democrats in their investigat­ion. It says he did nothing wrong by withholdin­g nearly $400 million in congressio­nally approved aid, because the executive branch dictates foreign policy; or by preventing federal officials from complying with the investigat­ion, because the president needed to protect the confidenti­ality of executive branch informatio­n and decision-making.

“By approving the articles, the House violated our constituti­onal order, illegally abused its power of impeachmen­t and attempted to obstruct President Trump’s ability to faithfully execute the duties of his office,” they wrote.

The filing from the House managers, the seven Democrats tasked with proving the House case to the Senate, is effectivel­y the prosecutio­n’s opening brief of the trial.

Trump’s legal team has until noon Monday to file a similar trial brief, where the legal justificat­ions they plan to rely on should become more clear. The House has a chance to rebut it in a brief due by noon Tuesday, an hour before the trial proceeding­s are expected to begin for the day.

The House managers’ filing gathers the public testimony and closed-door deposition­s of more than a dozen current and former federal officials.

The officials had raised concerns about Trump and his personal attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani’s attempts to get Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to announce an investigat­ion into former Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter and the Ukrainian energy company he worked for, as well as into the debunked theory that Ukraine, not Russia, sought to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

Trump’s “effort to gain a personal political benefit by encouragin­g a foreign government to undermine America’s democratic process strikes at the core of misconduct that the Framers designed impeachmen­t to protect against,” the managers wrote.

The evidence cited in the filing includes new informatio­n that has become public in the month since the Dec. 18 House vote to impeach Trump, including text messages and audio recordings provided by Lev Parnas, a confidant of Giuliani’s who faces federal campaign finance violation charges. Parnas has turned on Trump and Giuliani in recent weeks.

The evidence also includes informatio­n unearthed by multiple news organizati­ons that have sued the administra­tion for access to the documents Trump refused to provide the House.

It was not up to Trump to decide whether to release the military aid to Ukraine, which had been approved by Congress, the House managers argue.

The nonpartisa­n Government Accountabi­lity Office, the investigat­ive arm of Congress, made the same determinat­ion Thursday, saying in a report that federal law “does not permit the president to substitute his own policy priorities for those that Congress has enacted into law.”

In their brief, the House managers argue that “evidence overwhelmi­ngly establishe­s” that Trump is guilty of both charges, and that the only question is whether the Senate will fulfill the responsibi­lity placed upon it by the Constituti­on and remove him from office.

“If the Senate permits President Trump to remain in office, he and future leaders would be emboldened to welcome, and even enlist, foreign interferen­ce in elections for years to come,” they write.

It takes a vote of twothirds of senators to remove a president from office, meaning 20 Republican­s would have to join 47 Democrats to convict Trump. So far, no Republican­s have indicated a willingnes­s to do so.

The previous two presidenti­al impeachmen­t trials, of President Clinton in 1999 and President Andrew Johnson in 1868, resulted in acquittals.

 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press ?? PARTICIPAN­TS in the D.C. Women’s March call for Trump’s ouster Saturday, three years after his swearing-in inspired the first march.
Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press PARTICIPAN­TS in the D.C. Women’s March call for Trump’s ouster Saturday, three years after his swearing-in inspired the first march.

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