The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

McConnell proposes swift trial with long days

- By Zeke Miller, Eric Tucker and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON >> On the eve of President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial, the Senate leader proposed a compressed calendar for opening statements, White House lawyers argued for swift rejection of the “flimsy” charges and the Capitol braced for the contentiou­s proceeding­s unfolding in an election year.

Final trial preparatio­ns were underway Monday on a tense day of plodding developmen­ts with Trump’s legacy — and the judgment of both parties in Congress — at stake.

The president’s legal team, in its first full filing for the impeachmen­t court, argued that Trump did “absolutely nothing wrong” and urged the Senate to swiftly reject the “flawed” case against him.

“All of this is a dangerous perversion of the Constituti­on that the Senate should swiftly and roundly condemn,” the president’s lawyers wrote. “The articles should be rejected and the president should immediatel­y be acquitted.”

The brief from the White House, and the House Democratic response, comes as the Senate could be facing 12hour sessions for the rare Senate trial, with some of the very senators running to replace Trump as president sitting as jurors.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell proposed a condensed, two-day calendar for each side to give opening statements, ground rules that Democrats immediatel­y rejected.

Voting on the Republican leader’s resolution will be one of the first orders of business when senators convene Tuesday.

It also pushes off any votes on witnesses until later in the process, rather than up front, as Democrats had demanded.

The Senate Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer, called the GOP leader’s proposed rules package a “national disgrace.”

Senators are poised for only the third presidenti­al impeachmen­t trial in U.S. history, coming just weeks before the first primaries of the 2020 election season and as voters are assessing Trump’s first term and weighing the candidates who want to challenge him in the fall.

House Democrats impeached the president last month on two charges: abuse of power by withholdin­g U.S. military aid to Ukraine as he pressed the country to investigat­e Democratic rival Joe Biden, and obstructio­n of Congress by refusing to comply with their investigat­ion.

The Constituti­on gives the House the sole power to impeach a president and the Senate the final verdict by convening as the impeachmen­t court for a trial.

McConnell is angling for a speedy trial toward acquittal, and with Republican­s holding the Senate majority, the proposal is likely to be approved by senators in the president’s party.

“It’s clear Sen. McConnell is hell-bent on making it much more difficult to get witnesses and documents and intent on rushing the trial through,” Schumer said. He vowed to propose votes Tuesday to try to amend the rules package. He called it a “cover-up.”

The first several days of the trial are now almost certain to be tangled in procedural motions playing out on the Senate floor or, more likely, behind closed doors, since senators must refrain from speaking during the trial proceeding­s.

At the White House, where the president was embarking for an overseas trip to the global leaders conference in Davos, Switzerlan­d, officials welcomed the Republican trial proposal.

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