For John, BLUF: I was impressed that the now Citizen Trump was able to swiftly present a defense approach after having parted ways with his previous defense team, just before the weekend. The trial is set to begin Tuesday, 9 February. Nothing to see here; just move along.
From PJ Media, by Reporter Tyler O'Neil, 2 February 2021.
Here is the lede plus three:
On Tuesday, former President Donald Trump’s lawyers Bruce L. Castor Jr., and David Schoen released Trump’s answer to the Democrats’ article of impeachment accusing him of “incitement of insurrection.” Trump’s response breaks the Democrats’ impeachment article into eight separate allegations and responds to each claim. In a nutshell, the former president argues that it is unconstitutional for the Senate to remove a president when he has already left office and that he is innocent of the Democrats’ charges.It is obvious that the House Democratic Party Leadership jumped to a conclusion, without taking the time to conduct even a cursory investigation.Trump asks the Senate to “dismiss Article I: Incitement of Insurrection against him as moot, and thus in violation of the Constitution, because the Senate lacks jurisdiction to remove from office a man who does not hold office. In the alternative, the 45th President respectfully requests the Senate acquit him on the merits of the allegations raised in the article of impeachment.”
The Senate already voted to take up the impeachment, with five Republican senators joining 50 Democratic senators in holding the matter constitutional. However, 45 Republican senators voted not to hold the trial, given constitutional concerns. This vote signified that the Senate is not likely to convict Trump.
The former president makes a few extremely salient arguments against the Democrats’ impeachment article. In addition to the claim that the Senate cannot convict a former president on impeachment, Trump argues that the Democrats violated his free speech and due process rights in rushing to impeach him and that the article of impeachment is deceptively drafted in an unfair manner. Trump also claims that disqualifying him from office would constitute a “bill of attainder,” which has been broadly interpreted to mean a legislative act against a class of people that inflicts punishment on them without a judicial trial.
My question is if this upcoming trial will just be a blot on our record as a nation, or if it will be a prescedent for a more Caudillo like form of government?
Regards — Cliff
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Please be forthright, but please consider that this is not a barracks.