Democrats demand Trump's lawyer testify at impeachment trial

Published Jan 21, 2020

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World - Democrats accused

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of trying to rig U.S.

President Donald Trump's impeachment trial and demanded the

president's top lawyer be made a possible witness in the case.

Hours before the start of Trump's trial in the

Republican-controlled Senate on charges he abused power and

obstructed Congress, Democrats said the rules proposed by

McConnell would prevent witnesses from testifying and bar

evidence gathered by investigators.

McConnell unveiled a plan on Monday that would execute a

potentially quick trial without new testimony or evidence, and

give House Democratic prosecutors and Trump lawyers 48 hours,

evenly split, to present their arguments over four days.

In a letter on Tuesday, the seven House Democratic

"managers" prosecuting the case demanded White House counsel Pat

Cipollone disclose any first-hand knowledge he has of evidence

he will present in the trial, calling him a material witness.

Cipollone was widely criticized for writing an October 8 letter

in which he said Trump could not permit the administration to

participate in the House probe of the president's pressuring

Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, a top

Democratic contender to face Trump in the 2020 election, and

Biden's son Hunter.

Opening arguments are expected to begin this week and may

well run late each night. With a two-thirds majority needed in

the 100-member Senate to remove Trump from office, he is almost

certain to be acquitted by fellow Republicans in the chamber.

But the impact of the trial on his re-election bid is far

from clear. Americans go to the polls in November.

Under McConnell's plan, lawyers for Trump could move early

in the proceedings to ask senators to dismiss all charges,

according to a senior Republican leadership aide, a motion that

would likely fall short of the support needed to succeed.

"This is not the process for a fair trial. This is the

process for a rigged trial," Representative Adam Schiff said in

a news conference alongside other Democrats who will prosecute

the case against Trump.

"I do think that by structuring the trial this way it

furthers our case that what's going on here really is a cover-up

of evidence to the American people," he said.

Senate Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said he

would offer amendments to fix what he called flaws in

McConnell's proposals.

"It almost seems as though the resolution was written in the

White House, not in the Senate," Schumer said in a separate news

conference, referring to McConnell's plan.

McConnell has repeatedly said the rules for the trial would

mirror those the Senate used in the 1999 impeachment of

then-President Bill Clinton, and Republican senators have not

ruled out the possibility of further witness testimony and

evidence.

Votes in the Senate could take place as early as Tuesday on

the rules, including deciding whether the Senate should at a

later date consider subpoenas for witnesses, such as Trump's

former national security adviser John Bolton.

Democrats accuse Trump of pressuring Ukraine, a vulnerable

ally, to interfere in U.S. elections at the expense of American

national security and say he needs to be removed from office

because he is a danger to American democracy and national

security.

Trump and his legal team say there was no pressure and that

the Democrats' case is based on hearsay. They say the president

did nothing wrong and that Democrats are simply trying to stop

him from being re-elected.

Cipollone has described the Ukraine investigation as an

illegal attempt to remove a democratically elected president.

After Cipollone's letter, not a single document was produced

by the White House, the State Department and other government

agencies in response to 71 requests or subpoenas for records,

according to the House report on the impeachment inquiry. The

administration also sought to block current and former officials

from testifying.

TRUMP SUPPORT FIRM

The Senate proceedings are due to start at around 1 p.m. EST

(1800 GMT) and the trial is expected to continue six days a

week, Monday through Saturday, until at least the end of

January.

Trump has sought to rally his base with the impeachment

issue, fund-raising off it and at raucous election rallies

painting himself as the victim of a witch hunt.

Televised congressional testimony from a parade of current

and former officials who spoke of a coordinated effort to

pressure Ukraine to investigate the Bidens has done little to

change support for and against Trump's impeachment.

Reuters/Ipsos polling since the inquiry began shows Democrats

and Republicans responding largely along party lines.

According to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll conducted Jan.

13-14, 39% of U.S. adults approved of Trump's job performance,

while 56% disapproved. It also found 45% of respondents said

Trump should be removed from office, while 31% said the

impeachment charges should be dismissed.

The impeachment drama has consumed much of Trump's attention

even as the United States faces a series of international

challenges, including tensions with Iran that nearly boiled over

into open war and an on-again, off-again trade war with China.

Trump is attending the annual gathering of world business

leaders in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday to project an air of

business as usual and tout the strength of the U.S. economy.

Asked whether Trump was planning to watch the impeachment

trial from Davos, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham

said, "He has a full day here in Davos, but will be briefed by

staff periodically."

ACQUITTAL ALMOST CERTAIN

The trial of a U.S. president could be a moment freighted

with drama, huge political risk and the potential unraveling of

a presidency. But financial markets have shrugged it off, and

the revelations in the months-long impeachment investigation

thus far have done little to boost anti-Trump sentiment among

undecided voters or shift away moderate Republican voters.

This is only the third impeachment trial in U.S. history. No

president has ever been removed through impeachment, a mechanism

the nation's founders - worried about a monarch on American soil

- devised to oust a president for "treason, bribery or other

high crimes and misdemeanors."

A pivotal event in the impeachment case is a July 25 call in

which Trump asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to

investigate the Bidens, as well as a discredited theory that

Ukraine, not Russia, meddled in the 2016 election.

Hunter Biden had joined the board of Ukrainian energy

company Burisma while his father was vice president. Trump has

accused the Bidens of corruption without offering evidence. They

have denied wrongdoing.

Democrats said Trump abused his power by initially

withholding $391 million in Ukraine security aid intended to

fight Russia-backed separatists, and a coveted White House

meeting for Zelenskiy, to pressure Ukraine to announce the

investigations into the Bidens. Trump's legal team says there is

no evidence he conditioned the aid on getting that help.

The obstruction of Congress charge relates to Trump

directing administration officials and agencies not to comply

with House subpoenas for testimony and documents related to

impeachment.

Reuters

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