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IMPEACHMENT 2.0 THIS MONDAY: Pelosi To Send Articles To Senate; “There Will Be A Full Trial”, Schumer Says


House Speaker Nancy Pelosi plans to send the article of impeachment against former President Donald Trump to the Senate on Monday, launching the start of the former president’s trial on a charge of incitement of insurrection over the deadly Capitol riot.

“There will be a trial,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in making the announcement Friday. “It will be a full trial, it will be a fair trial.”

Trump is the first president to be twice impeached and the first to face a trial after leaving office.

While the transmission of the article launches the trial proceedings, the schedule ahead remains uncertain as the Senate, now in Democratic control, is also working to swiftly confirm President Joe Biden’s Cabinet nominees and tackle the new administration’s legislative priorities.

Biden says the Senate can do both and Schumer said he also speaking to Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell about the “timing and duration” of the proceedings ahead.

“Senate Republicans strongly believe we need a full and fair process,” McConnell said after Schumer spoke. On Thursday he proposed delaying the start of Trump’s trial to February to give the former president time to prepare and review his case. Trump is still assembling his legal team..

House Democrats who voted to impeach Trump last week for inciting the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot say a full reckoning is necessary before the country – and the Congress – can move on.

The timing and details ahead rests on negotiations between Schumer and McConnell, who are also in talks over a power-sharing agreement for the Senate, which is narrowly-split, 50-50, but in Democratic control because the vice president serves as a tie-breaking vote.

Under an extended timeline as McConnell proposed, the president’s defense team and House prosecutors would have two weeks to file briefs. Arguments would likely begin in mid-February.

A trial delay could appeal to some Democrats, as it would give the Senate more time to confirm Biden’s Cabinet nominees and debate a new round of coronavirus relief.

Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, a key ally of the president’s, told CNN that Democrats would consider a delay “if we are making progress on confirming the very talented, seasoned and diverse” team Biden has nominated.

Pelosi said Trump doesn’t deserve a “get-out-of-jail card” just because he has left office and Biden and others are calling for national unity.

Facing his second impeachment trial in two years, Trump began to assemble his defense team by hiring attorney Butch Bowers to represent him, according to an adviser. Bowers previously served as counsel to former South Carolina Govs. Nikki Haley and Mark Sanford.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina helped Trump find Bowers after members of his past legal teams indicated they did not plan to join the new effort. Trump is at a disadvantage compared to his first trial, in which he had the full resources of the White House counsel’s office to defend him.

Pelosi’s nine impeachment managers, who will be prosecuting the House case, have been regularly meeting to discuss strategy.

Pelosi said it would be “harmful to unity” to forget that “people died here on Jan. 6, the attempt to undermine our election, to undermine our democracy, to dishonor our Constitution.”

Trump was acquitted by the Republican-led Senate at his first impeachment trial.

“This year, the whole world bore witness to the president’s incitement,” Pelosi said.

Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, said it was still too early to know how long a trial would take or if Democrats would want to call witnesses. But he said, “You don’t need to tell us what was going on with the mob scene we were rushing down the staircase to escape.”

McConnell, who said this week that Trump “provoked” his supporters before the riot, has not said how he will vote. He told his GOP colleagues that it will be a vote of conscience.

Democrats would need the support of at least 17 Republicans to convict Trump, a high bar. While a handful of Senate Republicans have indicated they are open to conviction, most have said they believe a trial will be divisive and questioned the legality of trying a president after he has left office.

Graham said that if he were Trump’s lawyer, he would focus on that argument and on the merits of the case – and whether it was “incitement” under the law.

“I guess the public record is your television screen,” Graham said. “So, I don’t see why this would take a long time.”

(AP)



15 Responses

  1. The man is now a private citizen and thus the Senate, although they’d love nothing more than seeing blood, isn’t legally empowered to pursue the impeachment trial. This is nothing but hype to further divide the country.

  2. The extreme hatred of Donald Trump, his followers, and all he stood for, is unprecedented and unwarranted.
    Exhibit A in how far this country has fallen.
    We will never have another President who was such a staunch supporter of Israel.

  3. @Yaapchik is 100% correct. This is exactly what the founders aimed to prevent, but as all things the left does, they need to destroy even more.

  4. > Yaapchik

    Do these guys care about such trivial things as “legalities”? They spied illegally on American citizens and and on the presidential campaign by committing perjury to fraudulently obtain a FISA warrant. Really, if these guys were at all interested in they would have put AOC on trial for bringing 150 “protestors” to occupy Pelosi’s office (look it up) in what they call a “sit in”. And there were riots (incited by the Democrat canards) during the Kavanaugh hearings where the Supreme Court offices were attacked – clearly meant to intimidate bot the Supreme Court and the Congress. And the riots literally blocks away from Trump’s inauguration in 2017 – hundreds arrested and clearly incited by the Democrats. And so forth ad infinitum.

  5. Hey Chukie. …. please get yourself a normal pair of eyeglasses so you look halfway normal. Please note: President Trump has millions of friends in N Y. if you in any way don’t leave him alone, come next election you’re out………….
    Be fore-warned. You’re a snake with that dumb smile

  6. @Yaapchik

    Stop posting false information, based on your lack of legal knowledge.

    This attorney will tell you the Congress has the power to Impeach, Try and Convict a former Federal official for actions while in office. They cannot remove him from office, but can issue a ruling that could prevent him from ever holding federal office again.

    While no former President has ever been impeached, other former officials have been.

  7. So much for “unity”, by endlessly and punitively pursuing the person that about half the country supports.
    Dem hypocrisy once again.

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