Democrats unlikely to convince 4 Republicans to hear witnesses at impeachment trial
Another key Republican has announced opposition to calling witnesses in U.S. President Donald Trump’s Senate impeachment trial, appearing to doom a bid by Democrats to have testimony in the trial and paving the way for an expected acquittal of Trump.
Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski said she carefully considered the need for witnesses and documents to be used in the trial that will determine whether Trump is removed from office, but ultimately decided against it. Democrats, who earlier in the day sounded resigned to defeat in their bid to call witnesses, would need four Republicans to join them to win a vote for witnesses.
«Tonight, all signs point to a rushed acquittal of an impeached president,» Patty Murray, a member of the Senate Democratic leadership, told reporters.
The timing of a final vote on whether to convict Trump was unclear. Republican senators had said it could take place late on Friday or on Saturday. But some senators said the final vote may be put off until next week, perhaps until Wednesday.
Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican presidential nominee and sometime critic of Trump, joined fellow party moderate Susan Collins of Maine as the only ones among the 53 Republican senators in the 100-seat chamber to support voting for witnesses.
Romney’s communications director, Liz Johnson, confirmed the senator’s position on Twitter.
Democrats needed to persuade four Republicans to vote with them in the Senate in order to call witnesses such as John Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser.
For those asking: As <a href=»https://twitter.com/SenatorRomney?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw»>@SenatorRomney</a> has said, he wants to hear from Ambassador Bolton, and he will vote in favor of the motion today to consider witnesses.
—@LJ0hnson
That final vote on whether to convict the Republican president could take place late on Friday or on Saturday, congressional sources said.
The Senate resumed debate on Friday afternoon, with further arguments from Trump’s legal team and the House of Representatives Democrats serving as prosecutors.
Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, who had been undecided, said late on Thursday that Democrats had proven the case against Trump but that the president’s actions did «not meet the United States Constitution’s high bar for an impeachable offence.»
Alexander said it was «inappropriate for the president to ask a foreign leader to investigate his political opponent and to withhold United States aid to encourage that investigation.»
‘Guard rails will be removed’: Blumenthal
The Democratic-controlled House voted to impeach Trump on Dec. 18, formally charging him with abuse of power for asking Ukraine to investigate a political rival, Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden, as well as a discredited theory about a computer server in connection with the 2016 election..
The House also charged Trump with obstruction of Congress for blocking current and former officials from providing testimony or documents.
Trump is only the third president in U.S. history to be impeached. A vote of two-thirds of the Senate is required to remove him from office and no Republicans have yet indicated they will vote to convict.
Senate Democrats have been arguing throughout the two weeks of proceedings that lawmakers need to hear from witnesses in order for it to be a fair trial. This would be the first Senate impeachment trial in U.S. history with no witnesses, including trials of two prior presidents and a number of other federal officials.
Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut told CNN: «The danger going forward is that the guard rails will be removed. The president now feels, in effect, legally unleashed.» Blumenthal added that the trial is no vindication for Trump «because it was really no trial — no witnesses, no documents, no real evidence.»
Trump’s Republican allies have sought to keep the trial on a fast track and minimize any damage to the president, who is seeking re-election on Nov. 3. Trump denies any wrongdoing.
Trump’s acquittal would allow him to claim vindication just as Democrats hold the first of the state-by-state nominating contests on Monday in Iowa to choose the party’s nominee to challenge Trump in the election. Biden is a leading contender to face Trump in the November vote.
The president held a rally in Des Moines, Iowa, on Thursday night and denounced the impeachment trial, again calling it an effort by Democrats to overturn his 2016 election victory.
He is scheduled to give the State of the Union address on Feb. 4.
WATCH | House manager Hakeem Jeffries on foreign interference in U.S. elections:
On Friday, the Democrats prosecuting Trump and the president’s lawyers are expected to present closing arguments before the Senate votes on whether to call witnesses.
Contradicting Trump’s version of events, Bolton wrote in an unpublished book manuscript that the president told him he wanted to freeze $391 million US in security aid to Ukraine until Kyiv pursued investigations of Democrats, including Biden and the former vice president’s son, Hunter Biden, the New York Times reported.
Bolton’s allegations go to the heart of impeachment charges against Trump. Democrats have said Trump abused his power by using the security aid — passed by Congress to help Ukraine battle Russia-backed separatists — as leverage to get a foreign power to smear a political rival.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, the highest-ranking U.S. official to travel to Ukraine since the impeachment began, emphasized American support for Ukraine.
«Today I’m here with a clear message: the United States sees that the Ukrainian struggle for freedom, democracy and prosperity is a valiant one. Our commitment to support it will not waver,» Pompeo said in Kyiv.
Ukraine counts on the United States for diplomatic support, sanctions on Moscow and military aid to buy Javelin anti-tank missiles and other hardware as it battles Russian-backed separatists in a war that has killed more than 13,000 people.