Even Under McConnell’s Rules, the House Can Make Its Case Against Trump
Not surprisingly, Senator Mitch McConnell has announced that President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial will, at least initially, be bare-bones. McConnell has proposed opening statements from the House impeachment managers and lawyers representing the president, with questions from senators through the Chief Justice. At least at the start, there will be no witness testimony—though a majority of the Senate could later vote to allow both testimony and new evidence. Though this format may not be the kind of proceeding the framers of the Constitution contemplated when they assigned to the Senate the responsibility to try impeachments, it still presents the opportunity for the House to make the case against Trump—to the Senate and, more importantly, to the American people.
What the Improper Removal of Mueller Could Mean for Trump’s Presidency
President Trump has recently taken to Twitter to disparage Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of possible links between the Trump campaign and Russia during the 2016 election. Coupled with the Attorney General’s firing of former deputy director of the FBI Andrew McCabe days before his retirement, the President may be seeking to undermine Mueller’s credibility and to send him a message. But it also could be seen as a dry run for the next step: dismissal of Mueller himself.
Posts by Author
- Christine Abely 1
- Lawrence Friedman and Victor Hansen 1
- Nicole Noël and Chance Meyer 1
- Allison Dussias 1
- Tigran Eldred 1
- Lawrence Friedman 21
- Judith Greenberg 2
- Victor Hansen 4
- Dina Francesca Haynes 7
- Aliza Hochman 1
- Peter Karol 2
- Lisa Laplante 2
- Sean Lyness 5
- Peter Manus 4
- Chanal McCain 1
- Lynn Muster 1
- James Rooney 2
- Kent Schenkel 1
- David Siegel 1
- Jordan Singer 6
- Monica Teixeira de Sousa 1
- Eliot Tracz 2
- Natasha Varyani 2
- Sidra Vitale 1