WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is on the verge of acquittal by the Senate, an end to only the third presidential impeachment trial in American history but coming at the start of a tumultuous campaign for the White House.
A majority of senators
have now expressed unease with Trump’s pressure campaign on Ukraine
that resulted in the two articles of impeachment. But there’s nowhere
near the two-thirds support necessary in Republican-held Senate for the
Constitution’s bar of high crimes and misdemeanors to convict and remove
the president from office.
The
outcome expected Wednesday caps nearly five months of remarkable
impeachment proceedings launched in Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s House, ending
in Mitch McConnell’s Senate and reflective of the nation’s unrelenting
partisan divide three years into the Trump presidency.
No
president has ever been removed by the Senate, and Trump arrived at the
Capitol for his State of the Union address on the eve of the vote eager
to use the tally as vindication, a political anthem in his reelection
bid. Allies chanted “four more years!”
The
president did not mention impeachment, nor did he have to. The mood was
tense in the House that impeached him. Pelosi tore up the speech when
he was done.
The
Wednesday afternoon vote is expected to be swift. With Chief Justice
John Roberts presiding, senators sworn to do “impartial justice” will
stand at their desk for the roll call and state their votes — “guilty”
or “not guilty.”
On the first article of impeachment, Trump is charged with abuse of power. On the second, obstruction of Congress.
Few
senators are expected to stray from party camps, all but ensuring the
highly partisan impeachment yields deeply partisan acquittal. Both Bill
Clinton in the 1999 and Andrew Johnson in 1868 drew cross-party support
when they were left in office after an impeachment trial. President
Richard Nixon resigned rather than face revolt from his own party.
Ahead
of voting, some of the most closely watched senators took to the Senate
floor to tell their constituents, and the nation, what they had
decided. The Senate chaplain has been opening the trial proceedings with
daily prayers for the senators.
“This
decision is not about whether you like or dislike this president,”
began GOP Sen. Susan Collins, the Maine centrist, announcing her resolve
to acquit on both charges.
GOP
Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio said that while he doesn’t condone Trump’s
actions, he was not prepared to remove him from the ballot nine months
before the election. “Let the people decide,” he said.
Centrist
Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has floated the idea of
censuring Trump instead, a signal of a possible vote to acquit.
Democratic Sen. Doug Jones, a former federal prosecutor seeking
reelection in strongly pro-Trump Alabama, told reporters he’s likely to
announce his vote Wednesday morning.
Most
Democrats, though, echoed the House managers’ warnings that Trump, if
left unchecked, would continue to abuse the power of his office for
personal political gain and try to “cheat” again ahead of the the 2020
election.
During
the nearly three-week trial, House Democrats prosecuting the case
argued that Trump abused power like no other president in history when
he pressured Ukraine to investigate Democratic rival Joe Biden ahead of
the 2020 election.
They
detailed an extraordinary shadow diplomacy run by Trump lawyer Rudy
Giuliani that set off alarms at the highest levels of government. Trump,
after asking Ukraine’s president for “a favor″ in a July 25 phone call,
temporarily halted U.S. aid to the struggling ally battling hostile
Russia at its border.
When
the House probed Trump’s actions, he instructed White House aides to
defy congressional subpoenas, leading to the obstruction charge.
Questions from the Ukraine matter continue to swirl. House Democrats may yet summon former national security adviser John Bolton to testify
about revelations from his forthcoming book that offer a fresh account
of Trump’s actions. Other eyewitnesses and documents are almost sure to
surface.
In
closing arguments for the trial the lead prosecutor, Rep. Adam Schiff,
D-Calif., appealed to senators’ sense of decency, that “right matters”
and “truth matters”′ and that Trump “is not who you are.″
“You
can’t trust this president to do the right thing, not for one minute,
not for one election, not for the sake our country,” Schiff intoned. “He
will not change. And you know it.”
Pelosi
was initially reluctant to launch impeachment proceedings against Trump
when she took control of the House after the 2018 election,
dismissively telling more liberal voices that “he’s not worth it.″
Trump
and his GOP allies in Congress argue that Democrats have been trying to
undercut him from the start. Trump calls both special counsel Robert
Mueller’s investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election and
the impeachment probe a “hoax” and says he did nothing wrong.
But
a whistleblower complaint of his conversation with Ukraine President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy set off alarms. When Trump told Pelosi in September
that the call was perfect, she was stunned. “Perfectly wrong,” she said.
Days later, the speaker announced the formal impeachment inquiry.
The
result is a 28,000-page record from the House, based on testimony from
17 witnesses, including national security officials and ambassadors, in
public and private depositions and House hearings.
The
result was the quickest, most partisan impeachment in U.S. history,
with no Republicans joining the House Democrats to vote for the charges.
The Republican Senate kept up the pace with the fastest trial ever, and
the first with no witnesses or deliberations.
Trump’s
celebrity legal team with attorney Alan Dershowitz made the sweeping,
if stunning, assertion that even if the president engaged in the quid
pro quo as described, it is not impeachable, because politicians often
view their own political interest with the national interest.
McConnell
commands a 53-47 Republican majority and braced against dissent. Some
GOP senators distanced themselves from Trump’s defense, and other
Republicans brushed back calls from conservatives to disclose the name
of the anonymous whistleblower. The Associated Press typically does not
reveal the identity of whistleblowers.
Trump’s
approval rating, which has generally languished in the mid- to low-40s,
hit a new high of 49% in the latest Gallup polling, which was conducted
as the Senate trial was drawing to a close. The poll found that 51% of
the public views the Republican Party favorably, the first time the
GOP’s number has exceeded 50% since 2005.
___
Associated
Press writers Eric Tucker, Laurie Kellman, Matthew Daly, Alan Fram,
Andrew Taylor and Padmananda Rama contributed to this report.
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