Trump impeachment trial: Democrats' bids for new evidence dashed in marathon first day
Democratic hopes that a moderate bloc of Senate
Republicans would join their demand for witnesses and testimony at Donald
Trump’s impeachment trial were temporarily disappointed, if not dashed, as
arguments on the first proper day of the trial extended past midnight into
Wednesday morning.
In seven consecutive votes split precisely along
party lines, the Senate voted down Democratic proposals to subpoena testimony
from four potential witnesses and documents from multiple government agencies.
Four additional votes defeated proposals to ease the admission of documents and
testimony and to relax related time restrictions.
“I know it’s late, but it doesn’t have to be late,”
Adam Schiff, the lead impeachment “manager”, or prosecutor in the case, said as
the proceedings entered their 12th hour.
“We don’t
control the schedule. There is a reason why we are still here at five minutes
till midnight, and that’s because they don’t want the American people to see
what’s going on here.”
Democrats fruitlessly called for testimony and
documents from the former national security adviser John Bolton; the acting
White House chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney; Mulvaney’s aide Robert Blair; the
budget official Michael Duffey; the White House; the state department; the
defense department; and the budget office relevant to an alleged scheme by
Trump to twist the powers of the presidency to extract personal political
favors from Ukraine.
Each of the proposed subpoenas was defeated by a
53-47 vote. Only one procedural amendment garnered a single Republican vote,
from Susan Collins of Maine. The 13-hour session came to an end just before 2am
local time, with yet another straight party-line vote to approve guidelines for
the trial unveiled by the majority leader, Mitch McConnell, just a day earlier.
Democrats accused Republicans of failing to commit
to a fair impeachment trial and of engaging in a “cover-up” of misconduct by
the president.
“The president is engaged in this cover-up because
he is guilty, and he knows it,” said Representative Val Demings of Florida, one
of the impeachment managers .
A further opportunity for the senators to demand
documents or witnesses was anticipated in the weeks ahead. But Schiff urged the
senators to issue subpoenas before an allotted period for senators to question
the legal teams.
“You should want to see these documents,” said
Schiff. “You should want to know what these private emails and text messages
have to say.
“The American people want a fair trial,” Schiff
said. “But a great many Americans don’t believe that will happen. Let’s prove
them wrong.”
Trump’s defense team struck a combative posture,
expressing outrage at what they said was unfair treatment of the president and
accusing the House of an attack on democracy.
“They’re not here to steal one election, they’re
here to steal two elections,” said Pat Cipollone, the White House counsel.
“They won’t tell you that. They don’t have the guts to say it directly. But
that’s exactly what they’re here to do.”
The trial was scheduled to continue with late-night
sessions starting on Wednesday afternoon and running into the weekend. A
long-shot two-thirds majority of senators present would be required to remove
Trump from office.
The supreme court’s chief justice, John Roberts,
gaveled the trial to order shortly after 1pm.
“The Senate will convene as a court of impeachment,”
Roberts said, proceeding to swear in one senator, James Inhofe of Oklahoma, who
missed the group swearing-in last week.
Over the next 12 hours, Roberts stepped out of a
strictly procedural role only once, after the manager Jerry Nadler accused any
senator who voted against hearing from Bolton of casting a “treacherous vote”
and Cipollone demanded that Nadler apologize to Trump and his family.
Admonishing both sides, Roberts noted that Senate
rules and tradition required civil discourse. “I do think that those addressing
the Senate should remember where they are,” he said.
The opposing legal teams, seated in a cramped
arrangement at tables stacked with paper at the base of the Senate rostrum,
struck an immediate contrast in style and substance.
While Trump’s team attacked the conduct of the
impeachment process in the House and resuscitated a call for more information
about the whistleblower whose complaint launched the process, the Democrats
appealed to the 100 senators before them.
“They talk
about how bad the House is – I don’t agree with that at all,” the minority
leader, Chuck Schumer, told reporters during a break in the trial, referring to
Trump’s defense team. “They don’t make a single argument why there shouldn’t be
witnesses or documents.”
As the hours wore on, certain rhythms and
incongruities in the trial emerged. While the House managers used almost all of
their allotted debate time, liberally deploying video clips drawn from public
hearings last month, Trump’s defense team used only a fraction of its time,
repeating a blanket defense of the president’s conduct and rarely referring to
previous testimony in the case.
To debate various proposed subpoenas, Schiff
deployed one of the other seven managers to make a scripted case and then,
after Trump’s team had spoken, rose to deliver impromptu rebuttals.
After the deputy White House counsel Patrick Philbin
said the Democratic request for new witnesses amounted to an admission that
they were unprepared for trial, Schiff pounced, calling on Trump’s former
national security adviser and current acting chief of staff to appear.
“We’re ready,” Schiff said. “The House calls John
Bolton. The House calls Mick Mulvaney. Let’s get this trial started, shall we.
“We are ready to present our case. We are ready to
call witnesses. The question is, will you let us?”
Pounding the lectern, Jay Sekulow, a personal lawyer
for Trump and talk-radio host, blazed through a series of conservative talking
points and conspiracy theories ranging in focus from the special counsel Robert
Mueller to the former attorney general Eric Holder.
“This isn’t a
legal defense,” tweeted Kate Brannen, editorial director of the Just Security
website. “It’s the equivalent of impeachment jazz hands.”
After Cipollone delivered a terse statement
declaring: “The president has done absolutely nothing wrong,” Schiff took the
lectern to reprise his description of Trump’s alleged misconduct and to
underscore the gravity of the moment.
“You have all now sworn an oath,” Schiff told the
senators. “To do impartial justice. That oath binds you. That oath supersedes
all else. Nothing matters now but the oath to do impartial justice. And that
oath requires a fair trial.”
Trump is charged with abuse of power and obstruction
of Congress, in connection with his attempts to pressure Ukraine to investigate
his political rivals.
In the hours before the trial began, Democrats
escalated their criticism, lambasting what they called a “cover-up” and a “rigged
process” designed to push key moments of the trial into the “dark of night”.
If Democrats are to secure additional witnesses,
they will need at least four Republicans to back them. A handful of moderates,
including Susan Collins of Maine and Mitt Romney of Utah, have indicated that
they could support an effort to call witnesses – but only on the timeline
outlined in a proposal advanced by McConnell.
With the trial under way, Democrats continued to
press Republicans to refuse McConnell’s terms and work with them to reach a
bipartisan solution.
“No jury
would be asked to operate on McConnell’s absurdly compressed schedule,” said
Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker. “It is obvious that no senator who votes for
it is intending to truly weigh the damning evidence of the president’s attacks
on our constitution.”
In their legal brief submitted to the Senate on
Sunday, the House managers outlined their case, alleging Trump corruptly sought
foreign interference in the 2020 election by pressuring Ukraine to launch
investigations into his political opponents while withholding nearly $400m in
military aid and dangling a coveted White House meeting with Ukraine’s
president, Volodymr Zelenskiy.