Donald Trumpâs Senate impeachment trial hurtled towards a swift conclusion on Friday, setting the stage for a vote this weekend on whether to convict the former president for inciting an insurrection.
Trumpâs lawyers wrapped up their case on Friday after using just a fraction of the 16 hours they were allotted, after which senators from both parties posed questions to the Democratic impeachment managers and the former presidentâs legal team.
The trial will resume on Saturday morning, with both sides expected to make closing arguments followed by a final vote that could take place as early as Saturday afternoon.
Trumpâs lawyers accused Democrats of a âcampaign of retributionâ against him and called the article of impeachment an âunjust and blatantly unconstitutional act of political vengeanceâ.
The former president was impeached last month by the House of Representatives on one charge of inciting an insurrection for his role in the January 6 attack on the US Capitol that left five people dead.
Many of the senatorsâ questions on Friday focused on Trumpâs activities on January 6, including when he learned about the breach at the Capitol and whether Mike Pence was in danger when he sent a disparaging tweet about his own vice-president.
Trumpâs lawyers anchored their arguments in several montages featuring Democrats, including reels of lawmakers calling for Trumpâs impeachment as far back as early 2017, as well as clips of House members and senators urging their supporters to âfightâ for what they believe in.
The legal team sought to equate Democratsâ use of the word âfightâ with Trumpâs own invocation to crowds of his supporters on the National Mall on January 6. Shortly before the riot, he said: âIf you donât fight like hell, youâre not going to have a country any more.â
Addressing Democrats in the Senate chamber, trial lawyer David Schoen said: âYou didnât do anything wrongâ.â.â.âItâs a word people use, but please stop the hypocrisy.â
At one point, Michael van der Veen, one of Trumpâs lawyers, claimed âextremists of various different stripes and political persuasionsâ had participated in the January 6 siege, and repeated the false claim that arrested rioters were members of Antifa, or far-left activists.
Trumpâs legal team argued the former presidentâs speech was protected under the First Amendment of the US Constitution. His lawyers have also repeatedly argued the Senate does not have jurisdiction to try a former president.
Schoen and Bruce Castor Jr, a former prosecutor from Pennsylvania, were widely criticised earlier this week for their performance in a debate on the constitutionality of the trial. One Republican senator, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, responded to their arguments by voting with Democrats. âAs an impartial juror, Iâm going to vote for the side that did the good job,â he said.
Cassidy was pictured on Thursday holding a statement suggesting he was preparing to acquit the president, although his staff said that it did not mean he had made a final decision.
Trumpâs lawyers met on Thursday with a small group of GOP senators who are among the former presidentâs most ardent defenders, including Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Ted Cruz of Texas. The move attracted criticism given senators swore an oath to act as impartial jurors in the trial.
Cruz told reporters after the meeting that senators shared their âthoughtsâ on the teamâs legal strategy.
âI think the end result of this impeachment trial is crystal clear to everybody,â he added. âDonald Trump will be acquitted, and every person in the Senate chamber understands there are not the votes to convict him.â
Fridayâs presentation came after two days of arguments from House Democrats, who are acting as prosecutors in the case. Led by Jamie Raskin, a Democratic congressman from Maryland, their presentation included hundreds of Twitter messages, videos and speeches from the former president, as well as previously unseen security camera footage from inside the Capitol during the riot.
Several Republican senators praised the Democratsâ presentation. But a critical mass of Republicans is unlikely to vote to convict Trump, or bar him from holding future office, with a majority of them previously voting that the trial is not constitutional.
Under the constitution, two-thirds of the US Senate would need to find Trump guilty in order for him to be convicted â something that would require the support of 17 Republican lawmakers given the upper chamber of Congress is currently split, 50-50, between Republicans and Democrats. Trump could then be banned from holding future office with a simple majority vote.
Joe Biden told reporters at the White House on Friday morning that he was âanxiousâ to see how Republicans voted in the trial.
âIâm just anxious to see what my Republican friends do, if they stand up,â he said. Biden, who was sworn in as president on January 20, spent several decades in the Senate before serving as Barack Obamaâs vice-president.
Last month, more than 150 legal scholars, including the founder of the conservative legal group the Federalist Society and several of its members, wrote an open letter arguing the constitution allowed for the trials of both current and former public officials.
Trumpâs impeachment has exposed long-simmering tensions within the Republican party and underscored the grip the former president retains on the partyâs voters and elected lawmakers.
In an interview published on Friday in Politico Magazine, Nikki Haley, the former Republican governor of South Carolina who is widely seen as a potential candidate for president in 2024, said impeachment proceedings were a âwaste of timeâ but insisted Trump would not be running for office again.
âI donât think heâs going to be in the picture,â she said in the interview, which was conducted on January 12, one day before Trump was impeached by the House. âI donât think he can. Heâs fallen so far.â





