San Diego Union-Tribune

SENATE TRIAL TO PROCEED

After arguments, 56-44 vote rejects Trump claim that it is unconstitu­tional

- BY NICHOLAS FANDOS

The Senate voted Tuesday to proceed with Donald Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial, rejecting constituti­onal objections after House prosecutor­s opened their case with a 13-minute video capturing the deadly Capitol riot he stands accused of inciting.

Though the presentati­on stunned senators who lived through the rampage into silence, only six Republican­s joined Democrats in clearing the way for the case to be heard, the second indication in two weeks that Trump is all but certain to be acquitted.

“The result of this trial is preordaine­d,” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said after the 56-44 vote. “President Trump will be acquitted.”

The nine House Democrats prosecutin­g the former president aimed their opening arguments squarely at Republican­s who had the power to change the outcome. They cited an array of conservati­ve legal scholars to argue that the Senate not only had the right to try a former president for official misconduct, but an obligation. And they offered a raw and deeply emotional appeal from the well of the Senate, where a month before lawmakers had taken shelter as the pro-Trump mob closed in.

“Senators, this cannot be our future,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the lead manager, as he fought back tears. He described being locked inside the House chamber while colleagues called loved ones “to say goodbye” and his own daughter and son-in-law feared for their lives nearby.

“This cannot be the future of America,” he continued. “We cannot have presidents inciting and mobilizing mob violence against our government and our institutio­ns because they

refuse to accept the will of the people.”

It was the start of a case that Raskin and his team will begin prosecutin­g in full today that seeks to prove that Trump spent his final months in office trying to overthrow the election, then organized his supporters to rally against his loss and ultimately egged them on to march to the Capitol and stage a violent riot as Congress met to formalize President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.

They faced off against a hastily assembled defense team for Trump that offered an at-times meandering presentati­on, ultimately arguing that trying the former president would violate the Constituti­on. It began with a circuitous presentati­on from Bruce Castor, who launched into a speech that appeared to confuse senators in both parties.

His partner David Schoen was sharper, asserting that Democrats were driven by an “insatiable lust” to destroy Trump, and warning that they would instead damage the country by setting a new standard to pursue former officials.

“Under their unsupporta­ble constituti­onal theory, and tortured reading of the text, every civil officer who has served is at risk of impeachmen­t if any given group elected to the House decides that what was thought to be important service to the country when they served now deserves to be canceled,” Schoen said.

The defense’s case drew perplexed reactions from Republican­s, prompting at least one, Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, to side with Democrats on the vote to allow the trial to proceed.

Cassidy voted last month in favor of a constituti­onal objection to the trial and was the only Republican to switch his position Tuesday.

By embracing the defense’s arguments for dismissal, Republican­s gave themselves cover to acquit Trump without judging the case on its merits. Many Republican senators have said publicly and privately that they hold Trump at least partly responsibl­e for the assault at the Capitol, but the

former president retains a singular hold on their voters and their party.

Others, like Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., continue to insist they will serve as impartial jurors and are open to conviction even if they voted to dismiss the case on constituti­onal grounds. But the two positions are difficult to reconcile.

Seventeen Republican­s would have to abandon Trump to reach the twothirds threshold to convict him. In the vote Tuesday, the six Republican­s who said the trial should go forward were Cassidy, Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah, Ben Sasse of Nebraska and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia.

Still, it was clear the House managers had fulfilled their goal of forcing senators to stare down the reality of what unfolded on Jan. 6 and contemplat­e Trump’s role in the rampage. Raskin, a former constituti­onal law professor, had senators sitting silently in their chamber, reliving the assault through a video complete with graphic scenes of violence by the rioters.

At one point, the anguished screams of a police officer were heard as he was nearly crushed by the mob at the door.

Raskin’s emotional appeal

came after a lengthy legal argument in which he said that Trump and his lawyers were asking senators to create an illogical “January exception” that flew in the face of the founders’ intent. Raskin argued that the Senate must not allow a president to become immune from conduct committed in his last month in office.

“Everyone can see immediatel­y why this is so dangerous,” he said. “It is an invitation to the president to take his best shot at anything he may want to do on his way out the door, including using violent means to lock that door, to hang on to the Oval Office at all costs and to block the peaceful transfer of power.”

The words still hung in the Senate chamber as Raskin hit play on a video montage of the deadly assault, interspers­ing the president’s own words with footage of the pro-Trump throng mobbing the Capitol and marauding through its corridors.

“He would have you believe there is absolutely nothing the Senate can do about it,” Raskin said, gesturing at the images. “No trial. No facts. He wants you to decide that the Senate is powerless at that point. That can’t be right.”

Raskin said the framers had intended just the opposite. They had been perfectly comfortabl­e with impeaching former officials, he said.

There were other, subtler nudges to pull Republican­s into the trial. The managers repeatedly referred to conservati­ves’ favored approaches to analyzing the Constituti­on, cited legal scholars associated with the conservati­ve Federalist Society and embraced an unlikely ally, Charles Cooper, an influentia­l conservati­ve lawyer allied with congressio­nal leaders who made a forceful argument this week in The Wall Street Journal in favor of a trial.

The arguments from Trump’s three-person defense team, installed just two weeks ago, were less cohesive.

Castor launched into an ambling, and at times contradict­ory, monologue about the passions of the moment and senators’ love of country. After nearly an hour, he reached a conclusion, saying that as a private citizen, Trump should not be impeached, and that if the Justice Department believed he had done anything wrong, it would be prosecutin­g him.

“There is no opportunit­y where the president of the United States can run rampant in January at the end of his term and just go away scot free,” Castor said. “The Department of Justice does know what to do with such people.”

He argued that Democrats really just wanted to make sure that Trump could not run again.

Following him at the podium, Schoen took a more adversaria­l role. He called Sen. Patrick Leahy, who was presiding as the Senate’s president pro tempore, a biased judge. And he said that Trump’s admonition to his supporters on Jan. 6 to “fight like hell” was protected free speech.

Schoen derided the managers for hiring a “movie company” to stitch together the most gruesome scenes of the attack as if it were a “blood sport.” But he played his own video presentati­on of clips of Democratic lawmakers through the years calling for Trump to be impeached.

 ?? DOUG MILLS THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? House impeachmen­t managers walk to the Senate side of the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday to begin the second impeachmen­t trial of Donald Trump.
DOUG MILLS THE NEW YORK TIMES House impeachmen­t managers walk to the Senate side of the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday to begin the second impeachmen­t trial of Donald Trump.
 ?? ERIN SCHAFF THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? House impeachmen­t managers at the Capitol watch the first day of the Senate impeachmen­t trial of former President Donald Trump on Tuesday. Managers showed a video detailing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
ERIN SCHAFF THE NEW YORK TIMES House impeachmen­t managers at the Capitol watch the first day of the Senate impeachmen­t trial of former President Donald Trump on Tuesday. Managers showed a video detailing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
 ?? AP ?? Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., the lead House manager, becomes emotional as he speaks Tuesday during the second impeachmen­t trial of Donald Trump.
AP Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., the lead House manager, becomes emotional as he speaks Tuesday during the second impeachmen­t trial of Donald Trump.

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