Senators vote against hearing witnesses, paving way for Trump acquittal
The US Senate voted
against hearing witnesses in the impeachment trial of Donald Trump on Friday,
paving the way for Trump’s acquittal on charges of abuse of power and
obstruction of Congress.
The Senate voted 51-49
to block witnesses, with only two Republicans, Mitt Romney of Utah and Susan
Collins of Maine, crossing party lines to support the Democratic call for
witnesses.
The Senate adjourned
for the weekend with a plan to reconvene on Monday for closing arguments in the
impeachment trial. A final vote on the charges against Trump was scheduled for
4pm Wednesday.
The witnesses ban ended
the Democrats’ best hope for a break in the trial that might shock Republicans
out of their lockstep support for Trump. In explaining their “no” votes,
several Republicans said they believed that Trump had acted inappropriately but
did not deserve to be removed.
Nancy Pelosi, the House
speaker, said the vote against calling witnesses made Republicans “accomplices
to the president’s cover-up”.
Trump “is impeached
forever”, Pelosi said in a statement. “There can be no acquittal without a
trial. And there is no trial without witnesses, documents and evidence.”
The witnesses question
failed despite an 11th-hour plea by the lead House manager, Adam Schiff, for
the Senate to fulfill its role as “the great anchor of the government”, in the
words of President James Madison.
“There is a storm moving through this Capitol.
Its wind are strong and they blow us in uncertain and dangerous directions,”
Schiff said.
“Remove that anchor and
we are adrift. But if we hold true, if we have faith that the ship of state can
survive the truth, this storm shall pass.”
Despite those warnings,
Trump’s acquittal on Wednesday seemed all but certain. The president is
scheduled to deliver the State of the Union address in the House chamber on
Tuesday evening.
The trial on Friday was
wracked by major twists outside the chamber, including the revelation that the
lead lawyer who for days has denied on the Senate floor that Trump was involved
in a Ukraine scheme was himself privy to that effort, according to a new report
on a forthcoming book by the former national security adviser John Bolton.
Democrats have called
for weeks for the Senate to subpoena Bolton’s testimony. Even as the Republican
majority moved to stifle that call, a newly leaked excerpt from Bolton’s book
supported the central charge against Trump: that he conditioned military aid
for Ukraine on the receipt by him of political favors.
Trump asked Bolton in a
May meeting to contact the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and tell
him to meet Rudy Giuliani, Bolton’s book says, according to a New York Times
report. Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer, was in charge of the
in-country effort to make the Ukrainians understand what Trump wanted – and to deliver
it.
In a further bombshell,
Bolton wrote that the White House counsel, Pat Cipollone, was among the
attendees of the May meeting. Cipollone is the leader of Trump’s impeachment
defense team. If Bolton’s account is true, Cipollone has hidden his knowledge
of the Ukraine scheme while ridiculing the notion there was ever such a scheme
– and simultaneously accusing the House managers of concealing evidence.
Trump denied Bolton’s
account. He said in a statement: “I never instructed John Bolton to set up a
meeting for Rudy Giuliani, one of the greatest corruption fighters in America
and by far the greatest mayor in the history of NYC, to meet with President
Zelenskiy. That meeting never happened.”
Schiff pounced on the
denial as the Senate began debate on Friday on the question of calling
witnesses. He said: “Here you have the president saying John Bolton is not
telling the truth. Let’s find out. Let’s depose John Bolton under oath. Let’s
find out who’s telling the truth.
“As Mr Cipollone said,
let’s make sure that all the facts come out.”
Among those joining
Schiff’s call for witnesses on Friday was John Kelly, Trump’s former chief of
staff, who alluded to polls showing overwhelming public support for calling
witnesses.
“If you don’t respond
to 75% of the American voters and have witnesses, it’s a job only half done,”
Kelly said. “You open yourself up forever as a Senate that shirks its
responsibilities.”
On Thursday night,
Republican Lamar Alexander, a retiring senator, said he would vote against
witnesses. Alexander’s announcement effectively closed the door on the
possibility Democrats would be able to force the Senate to bring on witnesses
to testify in the trial.
Trump’s conduct was
inappropriate but did “not meet the US constitution’s high bar for an impeachable
offense”, Alexander said. “The question then is not whether the president did
it, but whether the United States Senate or the American people should decide
what to do about what he did.”
Senator Marco Rubio of
Florida announced on Friday that he opposed convicting Trump despite his belief
in Trump’s guilt. “Just because actions meet a standard of impeachment does not
mean it is in the best interest of the country to remove a president from
office,” Rubio said in a statement.
The announcements on
witnesses came after the final day of questioning from senators. The
questioning segment did not seem to sway a significant swath of Democratic or
Republican lawmakers.
At a rally in Iowa on
Thursday night, Trump derided what he called “impeachment-lite”.
“While we’re proudly
creating jobs and killing terrorists, congressional Democrats are consumed with
partisan rage and obsessed with a deranged witch-hunt hoax,” Trump said,
eliciting boos and thumbs-down gestures from supporters in Des Moines. “We’re
having probably the best years we’ve ever had in the history of our country –
and I just got impeached!”