Trump impeachment: president faces key vote on calling witnesses
The Senate trial will resume at 1 pm ET, and it will
kick off with two hours of closing arguments from the impeachment managers and
Trump’s legal team.
Senators are then expected to move on to a vote on
calling witnesses, which is likely to fail after Republican Lamar Alexander
announced last night he would not support the Democratic proposal.
If the witness vote fails, majority leader Mitch
McConnell could quickly move on to a final vote on the two articles of
impeachment, abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
It’s very possible that Trump will be acquitted of
those charges tonight, more than four months after the House formally launched
its impeachment inquiry.
A new national poll has found Bernie Sanders and Joe
Biden virtually tied in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination,
with just three days to go until the Iowa caucuses.
According to the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal
poll, Sanders is attracting the support of 27% of Democrats acroos the country,
while Biden stands at 26%. This marks the first time in the outlets’ polling
that Sanders has led the primary.
Elizabeth Warren is in third place at 15%, and no
other candidate makes it into the double digits.
National polls are not very helpful for predicting
the winner of the early voting states, but Sanders’ national polling surge
comes as a couple of recent surveys have also shown him narrowly pulling ahead
in Iowa.
Sanders is also the favorite to win the second
voting state, New Hampshire, so the other candidates, namely Biden, will have
to find a way to stop Sanders’ momentum if they want a shot at the nomination.
In another reminder of the stark contradictions and
departures from past precedent this impeachment hearing has thrown up, lawyers
for the Trump administration argued yesterday, in a separate legal proceeding,
that a president can be impeached over failure to comply with subpoenas issued
by the House of Representatives, reports Oliver Laughland.
Of the two articles of impeachment Donald Trump is
currently being tried on, one relates to obstruction of Congress due to his
administration’s decision to block witnesses and other evidence requested by
the House. Trump’s lawyers have argued repeatedly that the president cannot be
impeached over this offense, suggesting the president has a right to protect
the executive branch from requests from Congress.
On Thursday, however, during entirely separate legal
proceedings, a Justice Department lawyer argued in federal court that the
president could be impeached over ignoring subpoenas. The proceedings related
to the administration’s handling of the 2020 census, an issue being probed by
the Democratic-controlled House.
In this case, too, the Trump administration is
refusing to hand over certain evidence. DOJ lawyer James Burnham told a DC
federal judge that while it was the president’s right to ignore the subpoenas,
Congress had other powers, including impeachment, to hold the executive to
account.
The news travelled to an outraged Adam Schiff, one
of the Democrat impeachment managers, on Thursday evening and drew derision and
laughter from senators on the jury.
“In the category of you can’t make this stuff up,”
Schiff said. “The judge says if the Congress can’t enforce its subpoenas in
court, then what remedy is there? And the Justice Department lawyer’s response
is impeachment.”
The Justice Department later issued a statement,
attempting to clarify Burnham’s remarks: “The point we made in court is simply
that Congress has numerous political tools it can use in battles with the
Executive Branch — appropriations, legislation, nominations, and potentially in
some circumstances even impeachment.”
Yesterday we reported that a stretch of Trump’s
border wall between the Californian town of Calexico and Mexicali in Mexico had
blown over on the Mexican side during high winds.
Today things get worse for the wall, one of the
president’s landmark pledges in the 2016 election. The Washington Post reports
that US border officials and others say it will probably “require the
installation of hundreds of storm gates to prevent flash floods from
undermining or knocking it over, gates that must be left open for months every
summer during ‘monsoon season’ in the desert”.
“The open, unmanned gates in remote areas already
have allowed for the easy entry of smugglers and migrants into the United
States,” the paper adds.
One of the Democratic contenders has dropped out of
the primary race ahead of the Iowa caucuses on Monday ... John Delaney, the
former Maryland congressman who has been polling at about half a per cent.
He told CNN he was clear he would not have got
enough support in Iowa, and warned fellow Democrats against nominating Bernie
Sanders, saying the leftwing senator’s policies would make our job “so much
harder in terms of beating Donald Trump. And I also think that’s not real
governing.”
If today does turn out to be the end of the road for
Trump’s impeachment, there will surely be some soul-searching in the Democratic
party about whether or not they made the right decision in triggering this
process.
Democratic leaders went into it knowing it was
almost certain Trump would be acquitted, but they hoped to put his impeachment
on the record for posterity, gum up his legislative agenda, and damage him
ahead of this November’s election.
They seem to have succeeded on the first two counts,
but the jury is probably out on the final point – and we won’t be able to judge
that for sure until election night.
Certainly Trump and the Republicans have been
forcefully making the case that the impeachment process was an attempt by the
Democrats to overturn Americans’ democratic choice in 2016, and take away their
democratic choice this year. “Washington Dems have spent the last 3 years
trying to overturn the last election – and we will make sure they face another
crushing defeat in the NEXT ELECTION,” the president tweeted overnight
following a rally in Iowa.