• Sat. Oct 22nd, 2022

As former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial is set to begin Monday, questions remain on the proceedings.

Jan 24, 2021

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi plans to send the article of impeachment against Donald Trump to the Senate on Monday, launching the start of the former president’s trial on a charge of incitement of insurrection over the deadly Capitol riot. (Jan. 22)
AP Domestic
WASHINGTON  Former President Donald Trump’s historic second impeachment trial starts next month, but the process really begins Monday when the House sends the article of impeachment to the Senate and both sides begin preparing for a trial with many unknowns. 
The House swiftly impeached Trump Jan. 13 for inciting an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol the week before. When it comes to trial, senators will vote to decide whether to convict or acquit Trump.
The trial is unprecedented in nearly every way possible. No president had been impeached twice and no president has been tried by the Senate after he left office an issue dividing constitutional scholars over what is legally permissible.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced the trial will begin the week of Feb. 8 after both sides have had time to file briefs. But much remains unclear on what happens next, including what the trial will look like and when it might conclude. Some have questioned whether the chamber even has the authority to hear the impeachment case since Trump is no longer in office.
Here’s what we know:
When will the trial actually start?
The first step is the House officially transmitting its article similar to a charge  to the Senate. That will happen Monday at around 7 p.m. EST.
On Tuesday, senators will be sworn in as members of the “Court of Impeachment.” A summons will then be issued to Trump. The president has a week until Feb. 2  to answer the article while the House faces the same deadline to submit its pre-trial brief.
By the following Monday, Feb. 8, the president must submit his pre-trial brief and the House must submit its response to the president’s answer filed the previous week. On the following Tuesday, Feb. 9, the House must submit its pre-trial rebuttal brief. At that point, the trial can begin.
More: Trump impeachment trial to begin week of Feb. 8, Senate leaders announce
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Will Roberts, or someone else, preside over the trial?
One additional problem that could impact the trial is whether or not Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts presides. While the Constitution says Roberts would preside over an impeachment trial of a president, as he did during Trump’s first trial, it doesn’t address a former president  another question that has left Constitution scholars divided. 
Some experts believe Roberts would be able to decide whether to preside over the trial while others say it would be up to the Senate.
Suzanna Sherry, constitutional law expert at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, who is an authority on the impeachment process, called it an “open question” and something on which the Senate should attempt to “reach agreement” on. 
Kent Greenfield, a Constitutional law professor at Boston College, argued it could go either way. “The reality is that the text isn’t clear that it would be required of him,” he said.
If Roberts doesn’t preside, which is laid out in the Constitution to avoid the political conflicts of a vice president or senator overseeing the arguments, either Vice President Kamala Harris or Sen. Patrick Leahy, the Senate pro tempore, would oversee the trial. 
How long could the trial last?
Lawmakers and experts agree it’s likely this trial will be shorter than Trump’s last year, which went on for nearly three weeks.
The case against Trump is considered more open-and-shut than the charges he faced a year ago where he was accused of abusing his power and obstructing Congress for withholding aid to Ukraine in exchange for the country investigating President Joe Biden’s family. 
Biden said Friday he wouldn’t mind if the impeachment trial started after the Senate was able to confirm more of his Cabinet nominees given the pandemic and other challenges his new administration faces, a position some Democratic senators have backed.
“The more time we have to get up and running to meet theses crises, the better,” he said.
House impeachment managers, who will act as prosecutors arguing the case before the Senate, have largely kept their plans close to the vest, refusing to say whether witnesses might be called, which could extend the trial, and how long they want the trial to go. 
What are the consequences for Trump?
If the Senate voted to convict Trump  which requires support from at least two-thirds of the Senate, or 67 votes  it would not lead to immediate consequences mainly because Trump already has left office.
“He will not lose his security detail or other perks, because the Former Presidents Act (which grants those perks) only withholds them if the Presidents service in office was ‘terminated’ by the impeachment and conviction,” Sherry said. “Trumps term of office was terminated by the election and swearing in of Joe Biden, not by impeachment and conviction.”
More: Fact check: Trump loses several perks only if there’s an impeachment conviction by Jan. 20
More: Donald Trump impeached for incitement of mob attack on US Capitol
The real punishment would happen after  and only after  conviction.
With a simple majority vote (51 out of 100), the Senate could disqualify him from holding federal elective office in the future. Essentially, it would prevent Trump from running again for president, an office he has indicated he might pursue in 2024.
In 1974, the House abandoned impeachment after Richard Nixon resigned. But, unlike Trump, Nixon had already been elected twice and therefor ineligible to run again under the 22nd amendment to the Constitution so there was no need to disqualify him.
Constitutional scholars say this too has never been tested against a president or former president and is likely to face a legal challenge should senators vote to bar Trump from future office. 
Can a former president be convicted?
Trump impeachment: is impeachment after term is over a possibility? What’s the precedent? Your impeachment questions, answered on States of America.
USA TODAY
Constitutional scholars are split on whether a former president can be convicted  and the process of holding a trial for a former president has never been tested.
But, history and some precedent in the Senate helps offer a glimpse at how this question could be dealt with at Trump’s trial. 
Throughout U.S. history, several former officials have been impeached then saw their trial happen after they’d left office. The Senate has acted in different ways but has typically taken up such trials and there aren’t indications that the chamber would act differently with Trump. 
Throughout U.S. history, several former officials have been impeached then saw their trial happen after they’d left office.
Republicans and some of Trump’s closest allies have argued holding an impeachment trial for a former president would violate the Constitution  an argument that is likely to be made by the former president’s attorneys at the trial. 
While the question hasn’t been tested for presidents, it has for other officials.
In 1876, the Senate voted on the question, when Secretary of War William Belknap resigned shortly before the House impeached him. A majority of senators voted that he could still be tried. When the Senate held a trial, he was acquitted.
Sherry believes the Senate has the legal authority to hold a trial and vote to convict if they see fit.
“It would defeat the purpose of impeachment as a check on government officials if they could avoid it by leaving office,” she said.
The central issue is the text of the Constitution, which says impeachment applies to presidents, vice presidents and other “civil officers.” It doesn’t delve into former presidents or holding an official who left office accountable for conduct committed while in office. 
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“The text is not all together clear. The text and the framers didn’t imagine all the different iterations of situations that could come up,” Greenfield said. “I think most Americans think the Constitution is much more direct than it actually is. It uses vague and generalized language.” 
Greenfield said the question and the unpresented nature of this situation is, in a way, a good thing as impeachment remains rare throughout U.S. history. 
“This is a total anomaly. It’s a totally unique situation in our history, thankfully,” Greenfield said. “I think this president proved himself to be historically aberrational so having a historically aberrational remedy here seems the course.” 
While the Senate has largely ruled such cases of former officials could be heard before the chamber, senators in the late 1700s voted against hearing the trial of former Sen. William Blount and decided it did not have jurisdiction to hear the case since Blount had been expelled. 
Will enough Republicans vote to actually convict Trump?
No president has ever found himself so shunned and so isolated, with repercussions affecting his political legacy and his earnings potential.
USA TODAY
While Trump is facing impeachment a second time, the cases brought against him and the politics surrounding them couldn’t be more different. 
During Trump’s first impeachment, not a single House Republican voted with Democrats. This time, 10 voted to impeach him. Last year during his first trial, only one Republican senator  Mitt Romney of Utah  voted to convict the president on either of the counts. This time, that number could grow to a handful or potentially a dozen or more. 
The attack at the U.S. Capitol marked the Republican Party’s biggest break with Trump since he took office. Some of his closest allies condemned him and many have left open the possibility of convicting him at his trial, including the top Republican in the chamber: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. 
More: The 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Donald Trump: ‘There has never been a greater betrayal by a president’
Several key moderate Republicans made searing remarks about Trump, some calling for him to resign or for the 25th Amendment to be invoked before he left office last week. 
But the group, even if they voted with Democrats, wouldn’t be enough to convict Trump. A supermajority is needed 67 votes  and Democrats only hold 50 seats, so 17 Republicans would be needed if every Democrat voted in favor of convicting the former president. 
All eyes have been on McConnell and many on Capitol Hill believe if the Republican leader votes to convict Trump, it could open the floodgates and offer political cover for potentially a dozen or more to do the same. 
What was Trump impeached for?
Donald Trump is the first president to be impeached twice. Here’s what that means for the nation.
USA TODAY
The House approved one article of impeachment Jan. 13, charging Trump with “incitement of insurrection” over his role in the attack at the U.S. Capitol earlier this month. 
The article lays out Trump’s conduct before the Jan. 6 attack, noting his “false claims of election fraud in the months leading up to the riot,” claims that he also made in a speech to protesters directly before they stormed the Capitol. 
The article also cites Trump’s notorious phone call with Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, where the former president asked the official to “find” votes that could help him take the state back from Biden. 
The House’s impeachment article argues Trump disregarded his oath of office and his duties as president. 
“Trump gravely endangered the security of the United States and its institutions of Government,” the article of impeachment reads. “He threatened the integrity of the democratic system, interfered with the peaceful transition of power, and imperiled a coequal branch of Government. He thereby betrayed his trust as President, to the manifest injury of the people of the United States.”
Who will be prosecuting and defending?
The nine Democratic House lawmakers who will serve as prosecutors, or “managers,” during the Senate trial represent a mix of seasoned hands and newer faces.
The team of managers will be led by Jamie Raskin of Maryland, a constitutional law expert. It also includes: David Cicilline of Rhode Island, Joaquin Castro of Texas, Diana DeGette of Colorado, Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania, Ted Lieu of California, Joe Neguse of Colorado, Stacey Plaskett of the U.S. Virgin Islands and Eric Swalwell of California.
“For us to heal as a nation, we must remember,” Dean said on MSNBC Friday. “And that is what I believe the trial will represent, some of the very first steps toward this nation healing.”
None of the nine were managers during last year’s impeachment trial against Trump.
Trump has has hired South Carolina attorney Butch Bowers to represent him at the upcoming impeachment trial, aides said.
Bowers worked for the Justice Department during President George W. Bush’s administration but is better known as for his government work in South Carolina. He has served as counsel to Republican governors Nikki Haley and Mark Sanford, and did a stint as chairman pf South Carolina’s election commission.
Trump political adviser Jason Miller confirmed Bowers’ hiring on social media, retweeting praise of the South Carolina attorney.
“He’s good,” Miller tweeted Thursday. “Very good.”
Contributing: David Jackson
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