in

Trump Impeachment Vote Updates: House Convenes to Debate Two Articles – The New York Times, The New York Times

Trump Impeachment Vote Updates: House Convenes to Debate Two Articles – The New York Times, The New York Times


The House opened debate on rules to consider the two articles of impeachment – abuse of power and obstruction of Congress – against President Trump, after rejecting two attempts by Republicans to derail them. Final votes on the charges are expected this evening.

Peter Baker

Right Now

The House has begun debate on the rules for consideration of the two articles of impeachment.

Video

)
********** The House rejected a move by Republicans to derail the debate on the articles of impeachment. Final votes on the charges are expected this evening.

(Credit) ****************************** (Credit …) ************

Erin Schaff / The New York Times

Democrats defeated Republican efforts to derail the articles as the House met to debate them.

The House of Representatives turned back the first two of what may be a string of Republican efforts to block impeachment of President Trump inearly tests of partisan solidarityVideo player loadingon Wednesday, rejecting back-to-back motionsstrictly party-line votes.

The House voted (to 192 to block a motion to adjourn without considering the articles of impeachment and then voted (to 226 to put aside a Republican resolution condemning the inquiry as an illegitimate and unfair violation of House rules.

The second resolution, introduced by Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the Republican leader, outlined a litany of complaints about the way the inquiry was run by Representatives Adam B. Schiff of California and Jerrold Nadler of New York, the Democratic chairmen of the House Intelligence and Judiciary Committees.

Their “abuses of power,” as Mr. McCarthy’s resolution put it, echoing one of the charges against Mr. Trump, “willfully trampled on the rights of the minority” and “brought dishonor and discredit upon the House of Representatives.” Democrats moved to table the resolution, and the vote unfolded along party lines. ***************** (Image******************************************************** ******************************

******************************Representative Adam Schiff, Democrat of California, giving a television interview ahead of the House vote on Capitol Hill Wednesday morning.

Credit …Erin Schaff / The New York Times

“It’s going to be a lot of walking up these stairs today, I think,” Representative Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 Democrat, said as he climbed the steps from his Capitol office to vote on the first of the procedural votes called by Republicans.

The House will spend much of the rest of the morning debating the rules for the debate itself before taking up the two articles of impeachment themselves around midday. Democrats

assert that Mr. Trump committed high crimes and misdemeanors by pressuring Ukraine to tarnish democratic rivals to aid his re-election campaign while Republicans

argue that the majority was engaged in a partisan witch hunt against a president they fear they could not beat at the polls. The House plans to vote by the end of the day.

In a letter on Tuesday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi invited all Democratic members to be present on the floor on Wednesday as the chamber convened to debate the articles at what she called a “very prayerful moment in our nation’s history.”

Here’s a rough rundown of the schedule.********************************

    In the morning, the House is expected to debate

    the rules that the House Rules Committee

      hashed out on Tuesdaywith a vote expected around noon. This will be the first procedural vote by the full chamber to lay the groundwork for formally impeaching Mr. Trump. The rules call for six hours of debate, equally divided between Republicans and Democrats, on the articles.

    Republicans opened the day with the first of what may be a series of parliamentary moves to register their opposition and slow the process, which could lead to multiple procedural votes that don’t amount to much like the one to adjourn. The votes everyone is waiting for – on the two articles of impeachment

– are expected in the evening. House leaders anticipate two separate votes on the two articles to begin at 7: 20 PM and wrap up about 18 minutes later. (************************************

The House may also vote to empower Ms. Pelosi to name impeachment managers, whose identities are likely to become public in the coming days. The managers are House members who act much like prosecutors in the impeachment trial that is to follow in the Senate, presenting the findings of the House inquiry to their colleagues across the Capitol. Senators decide whether to acquit the president or to convict and remove him from office, which requires a two-thirds vote, or 150 senators if all are present.

****************Pelosi tapped a veteran Democrat, Diana DeGette, to preside over the historic debate.

**********

**********

Ms. Pelosi chose Representative Diana DeGette of Colorado, a veteran Democrat who had impressed her with a tough, skillful parliamentary hand, to preside over the historic debate on the articles of impeachment. .

Ms. DeGette, first elected in 3969, was until this year the Democrats’ chief deputy whip – the member of leadership responsible for counting votes, known in congressional parlance as “whipping.”She has held the gavel more than a dozen times this year, rotating in and out of the chair as members customarily do.

On Wednesday, she will spend the entire day in the chair. Her skills managing unruly proceedings on the House floor were quickly put to the test when Republicans moved to shut down debate on the articles of impeachment even before it had begun.

A top aide to Ms. Pelosi said Ms. DeGette had impressed the speaker with her past performance in the presiding officer’s chair. But Ms. Pelosi herself will preside over the vote, the aide said.

– Sheryl Gay Stolberg

With the final outcome seemingly preordained, perhaps the only suspense about the vote on Wednesday will be how many Democrats break with the party and oppose impeachment.

Two House Democrats who registered their opposition to the inquiry by voting against (its ground rulesin October, Representatives Collin C. Peterson of Minnesota and Van Van Drew of New Jersey,plan to vote against the articles as well – and Mr. Van Drew is expected to leave the party altogether to become a Republican.

Another 15 Democrats have said they were undecided or have not responded to the Times survey, but only one of them, Representative Ron Kind of Wisconsin, represents a district won by Mr. Trump. The rest of the so-called front-line Democrats representing Republican areasannounced their support for impeachment in recent days, suggesting that the party was rallying behind the effort.

No Republican has announced support for impeachment, and while have not said how they would vote, few expect any to break with the president.

While the House debates, the Senate looks ahead to a trial with the rules still unsettled.

Assuming the House proceeds with impeachment as anticipated, the fate of Mr. Trump’s presidency will soon be in the hands of the Senate, whose leaders are already quarreling over how to put on a fair trial in an era of deep divisions.

Senators Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Chuck Schumer of New York, the Republican and Democratic leaders, hardly waited for the House vote to debate how to proceed. On Tuesday, Mr. McConnell rejected Mr. Schumer’s proposal to call four witnesses who did not testify in the House inquiry, arguing that it was not the Senate’s job to complete a rushed and inadequate investigation by the House.

But even as Mr. McConnell and other Republicans assailed House Democrats for not hearing from key witnesses, they generally did not fault the White House for blocking those witnesses from testifying in the first place. Instead, they said the blame lay with Democrats for not going to court to challenge the White House refusal to cooperate, an approach that Democrats rejected because they connected the judicial process would take too long.

Mr. McConnell was navigating a tricky position of balancing Mr. Trump’s desire for vindication through a trial and the positions of vulnerable Republican senators who are concerned that an abbreviated trial or one that seems tilted to Mr. Trump would make it look like they did not take the charges seriously.

The various sides will continue to try to formulate a plan for the trial on Wednesday even as the House formally decides whether one will be needed.

A vote to impeach the president is just one part of the process. Here’s how it works and where it would go next.

Video player loadingVideo

transcript

transcript

(How Does the Impeachment Process Work?)

Explosive testimony. News media frenzies. A trial in the Senate. Here is how impeachment works – and how it has played out in the past.

************************************************ ()

“Impeachment by its nature, it’s a political process.” “What people think is going to happen can turn out to be very different from what happens. ”“ Because it has to do with elected officials holding another elected official to account for their conduct. ”When the framers of the constitution created a process to remove a president from office, they were well… kind of vague. So to understand how it’s going to play out, the past is really our best guide. “I think we’re just all in for a really crazy ride.” Collectively, these New York Times reporters have covered U.S. politics for over years. “I’m also a drummer in a band, so…” They’ve reported on past impeachment inquiries. “Yea, I’m lost in Senate wonderland.” And they say that the three we’ve had so far have been full of twists and turns. “The president of the United States is not guilty as charged.” In short, expect the unexpected. First, the process. Impeachment is technically only the initial stage. “Common misconceptions about impeachment are that impeachment by itself means removal from office. It doesn’t. The impeachment part of the process is only the indictment that sets up a trial. ”The Constitution describes offenses that are grounds for removing the president from office as bribery, treason and -“ They say high crimes and misdemeanors, which, really, is in the eye of the beholder. ”“ The framers did give us a guidebook to it. They simply said, that the House had the responsibility for impeachment and the Senate had the responsibility for the trial. ”One of the things missing from the Constitution? How an impeachment inquiry should start. And that has generally been a source of drama. Basically, anything goes. “In fact, in the Andrew Johnson case they voted to impeach him without even having drafted the articles of impeachment.” For Richard Nixon, his case started with several investigations that led to public hearings. That part of the process went on for two years, and yielded revelation after revelation, connecting Nixon to a politically-motivated burglary at D.N.C. headquarters – “… located in the Watergate office building.” – and its subsequent cover-up. Mr. Butterfield, are you aware of the installation of any listening devices in the Oval Office of the president? ”“ I was aware of listening devices. Yes, sir. ”“ This was a shocker. Everybody in the White House recognized how damaging this could be. ”As the House drafted articles of impeachment, Nixon lost the support of his party. “O.K., I shall resign the presidency effective at noon tomorrow.” “I was asked to write the farewell piece that ran the morning after Nixon resigned. And this is what I wrote: The central question is how a man who won so much could have lost so much. ”So for Nixon, it more or less ended after the investigations. But for Bill Clinton, that phase was just the beginning. “This is the information.” An independent counsel’s investigation into his business dealings unexpectedly turned into a very public inquiry about his personal life. “The idea that a president of the United States was having an affair with a White House intern and then a federal prosecutor was looking at that, it was just extraordinary.” That investigation led to public hearings in the House Judiciary Committee. “When the Starr Report was being delivered to Congress it was a little bit like the O.J. chase, only a political one. There were two black cars. They were being filmed live on CNN. They were heading towards the Capitol. We were watching it and a little bit agog. ”Public opinion is key. And the media plays a huge part in the process. This was definitely true for Clinton. “You know it was just a crazy time. We worked in the Senate press gallery. ”“ All your colleagues are kind of piled on top of each other. ”“ We had crummy computers, the fax machine would always break. The printer would always break. ”After committee hearings, the House brought formal impeachment charges. “It was very tense. I thought that the Saturday of the impeachment vote in the House was one of the most tense days I’d experienced in Washington. ”And it turned out, also, full of surprises. “The day of impeachment arrived, everyone’s making very impassioned speeches about whether Bill Clinton should or should not be impeached and Livingston rises to give an argument for the House Republicans. He started to talk about how Clinton could resign. ”“ You, sir, may resign your post. ”“ And all of a sudden people start booing and saying, ‘Resign, resign’! ”“ So I must set the example. ” “He announced he was resigning because he had had extramarital affairs and challenged President Clinton to do the only honorable thing, in his view -” “I hope President Clinton will follow.” ”- to resign as well, so there was all this drama unfolding even in the midst of impeachment. ”Then it went to the Senate for trial. The Constitution gets a little more specific about this part. “The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court is supposed to preside over that trial.” “Rehnquist, he showed up in this robe he had made for himself, which had gold stripes on the sleeves because he liked Gilbert and Sullivan.” “The Senate” is the actual jury. ”“ You will do impartial justice according to the Constitution and laws. So help you, God. ”“ This is a copy of the rules of the Senate for handling impeachment. They’re actually very specific. ”“ Meet six days a week. ”“ Convene at noon. The senators have to sit at their desks and remain quiet in their role as jurors. And not talk, which trust me, is going to be a problem for some of the senators who are used to talking all the time. ”It’s just like a courtroom trial. There are prosecutors who present the case against the president. “That was perjury.” Only, they’re members of the house, and they’re called managers. Then the senators, or the jurors, vote. And things are still, unpredictable. “The options are guilty or not guilty. But there was one senator – ”“ Arlen Specter, a moderate Republican from Pennsylvania. ”“ Under Scottish law, there are three possible verdicts: guilty, not guilty and not proved. ”“ – which is not a thing. ”“ And everybody just looks, you know, how do you even record that vote? ”In the end, there were not enough votes to oust Clinton. “What’s amazing about this whole thing to me wasn’t so much the constitutional process. It was that it felt to me like the beginning of really intense partisanship, the weaponization of partisanship. ”And here’s the thing: An impeachment charge has never gotten the two-thirds majority it needs in the Senate to actually oust a president from office. “So you could end up having a situation where the president is impeached, acquitted and runs for re-election and wins re-election.” And that would be a first. “This is my ticket to the impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton. I don’t think you’ll find these on StubHub. ”

(********************************************************

Explosive testimony. News media frenzies. A trial in the Senate. Here is how impeachment works – and how it has played out in the past.

(Credit**)Credit …Photo illustration by Aaron Byrd

(************************************************************** (**************************************************************

***************************************************************** (Read More) Payeer

What do you think?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Ikea previews its improved 2020 smart home experience – The Verge, The Verge

Ikea previews its improved 2020 smart home experience – The Verge, The Verge

Susan Collins will run for reelection in Maine – POLITICO, Politico

Susan Collins will run for reelection in Maine – POLITICO, Politico