Trump impeachment: Senate prepares to hear opening arguments in trial
As Donald Trump prepared on Tuesday to address the
billionaires in Davos, the US Senate prepared to hear opening arguments in an
impeachment trial that could remove Trump from the presidency, if not from his
seemingly unassailable perch in the public eye.
For only the third time in history, prosecutors sent
by the House of Representatives will rise on the Senate floor to charge the
president with “high crimes and misdemeanors” and declare that he must be
turned out of the White House.
Trump “is the framers’ worst nightmare come to
life”, Adam Schiff, chair of the intelligence committee and the lead
impeachment prosecutor, wrote in a brief filed Monday, referring to the authors
of the US constitution.
Trump was impeached in a party-line vote on two
articles, or charges, in the House last month, for abuse of power and
obstruction of Congress, relating to accusations that he threatened US national
security with his conduct towards Ukraine.
But as his Senate trial got under way in earnest,
Trump received a powerful boost of support from the majority leader, Mitch
McConnell, who on Monday night unveiled a resolution designed to move the trial
forward with unanticipated speed.
The schedule laid out by McConnell would consign key
proceedings to late, potentially post-midnight hours and left in doubt whether
the Senate would admit evidence gathered in the House – much less call any
witnesses to testify about Trump’s conduct.
Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the Senate,
called the resolution “a national disgrace”.
It is “clear Senator McConnell is hell-bent on
making it much more difficult to get witnesses and documents and intent on
rushing the trial through”, Schumer said.
Cocooned by the fidelity of a Republican party
intolerant of the least criticism of their leader, even as the trial begins
Trump appeared to be safe in his post. A two-thirds majority of members present
in the Republican-controlled Senate would be required to remove him.
But the Senate trial may hold hidden pitfalls for
Trump, including some that could be beyond the power of his sworn allies in the
Senate leadership to prevent.
To make their case, Democrats will seek to call
witnesses who might change the way the public perceives Trump’s alleged scheme
to wield the unique powers of his office for his own political advantage.
But under the McConnell rules, potential witnesses
would need to be deposed before testifying at the trial, and individual Senate
votes would be required to call the witnesses. It appeared that McConnell had
enough votes from his caucus to push the rules package through as soon as the
trial convenes on Tuesday afternoon.
Republicans have vowed to prevent witnesses from
appearing in order to testify, but just a few temporary defections from that
party line would give Democrats the narrow majority required to force witnesses
through or obtain new documents.
Presiding at the trial will be John Roberts, chief
justice of the US supreme court, who is expected to rule with a light touch but
who will have the power to admit evidence or testimony that Trump might prefer
omitted.
On the eve of the trial, a dozen lawyers for the
president revealed the full scope of their legal strategy, which will follow
Trump’s lead in taking a scorched-earth approach to the allegations against
him.
In a 110-page legal brief filed with the Senate on
Monday, the lawyers called the impeachment “an affront to the constitution and
to our democratic institutions” and “a brazenly political act by House
Democrats that must be rejected”.
The document attacked the Democrats’ case on
constitutional grounds, arguing that the impeachment was invalid because Trump
had not been accused of violating a particular law.
But that interpretation of the constitution was
unrecognizable to constitutional law experts, many of whom expressed public
dismay at what they called the reckless language of the document.
“Their argument is wrong, particularly when they
contend that ‘high crimes and misdemeanors’ requires proof of an indictable
crime,” Frank O Bowman III, a professor at the University of Missouri school of
law and an impeachment expert, told the Guardian in an email.
He continued: “Not true. Never has been, either in
England or the US. To argue otherwise, they cherry-pick their sources and
ignore the massive body of contrary evidence.”
While skipping past most of Trump’s alleged conduct
– all but ignoring the role in the Ukraine scheme of Trump’s main emissary,
Rudy Giuliani, and ignoring evidence showing Trump’s role in withholding
military aid to Ukraine – the legal document staked out a narrow band of
conduct by Trump and advanced familiar defenses of that conduct.
In a July 2019 phone call in which Trump reminded
the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, that “the United States has been
very, very good to Ukraine” and then asked for “a favor”, Trump was motivated
by a desire to stamp out internal Ukrainian corruption, the document argued.
“It’s like Presidential tweets reformatted to look
like a legal document,” tweeted Orin Kerr, a prominent scholar of
constitutional law and law professor at the University of California-Berkeley.
One of the most flagrant assertions in the Trump
legal brief, according to scholars, was an attack on subpoenas issued by the
House during the impeachment proceedings as “defective”. The White House relied
on that reasoning to deny witnesses and testimony to the House inquiry, which prompted
the obstruction of Congress charge.
“This is the argument of a monarch,” wrote Schiff,
“with no basis in the constitution.”
But as he prepared to depart for Switzerland, Trump
got well out ahead of his lawyers on Twitter, in a pattern that could repeat
itself during the trial, which is expected to last at least two weeks and could
run for much longer.
“They didn’t want John Bolton and others in the
House,” Trump tweeted, referring to his former national security adviser, who
could recount direct conversations with the president about Ukraine, in
testimony that could be damaging.
In fact, the intelligence committee requested in
October that Bolton appear to testify, but he declined, threatening the
committee with a lawsuit if they attempted to subpoena him.
“No, Mr. President, we did ask John Bolton to
testify,” Schiff replied on Twitter. “You ordered him not to, and blocked
others, like [acting chief of staff] Mick Mulvaney.
“All Americans know what [sic] a fair trial includes
documents and witnesses.
“What are you hiding?”