The Daily - The Moderates’ Impeachment Moment
Episode Date: January 22, 2020After nearly 12 hours of vicious debate, the Senate voted early Wednesday to adopt the rules that will govern the rest of the impeachment trial. But in a Republican-controlled chamber, why weren’t t...hey the rules that Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, had originally wanted?Guest: Julie Hirschfeld Davis, congressional editor for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.Background reading: Voting along party lines, Senate Republicans blocked Democrats’ efforts to subpoena witnesses and documents related to President Trump’s dealings with Ukraine.As the trial began in earnest, Mr. Trump was 4,000 miles away, touting the United States’ economic growth at the World Economic Forum, an elite gathering of business leaders in Davos, Switzerland.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily Watch.
Today, the Senate votes to adopt the rules
that will govern the rest of the impeachment trial.
Julie Davis on why they were not the rules
that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
had originally wanted.
It's Wednesday, January 22nd.
The Senate will come to order. The chaplain, Dr. Black, will open the Senate with prayer.
So on Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell opens the Senate
for this first day of the official impeachment trial.
The Senate's process will draw a sharp contrast with the unfair and precedent-breaking inquiry that was carried on by the House of Representatives.
He has spent weeks decrying the House impeachment inquiry as completely partisan and unfair.
the House impeachment inquiry as completely partisan and unfair.
Finally, some fairness.
On every point, our straightforward resolution will bring the clarity and fairness that everyone deserves.
And he's essentially saying this is our chance to show that we can do our duty as senators and...
Today's vote will contain some answers.
Today, we're going to find out whether that's possible.
Democratic leader.
Now, before I begin.
And then Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, gets up to make his speech. The McConnell rules seem to be designed by President Trump for President Trump.
And it's like they're on different planets.
He essentially says,
Mitch McConnell is pushing for this process
that's completely unfair.
There's nothing fair about this.
It's completely skewed toward President Trump
and what he wants to see in this trial,
which Schumer says is basically a cover-up.
If the president is so confident in his case,
if Leader McConnell is so confident the president did nothing wrong,
why don't they want the case to be presented in broad daylight?
On something as important as impeachment, the McConnell resolution is nothing short of a national disgrace.
This will go down, this resolution, as one of the darker moments in the Senate history.
Perhaps one of even the darkest.
What exactly are these two men really bickering over here?
Well, for some time now,
there has been this behind-the-scenes debate about what
the rules were going to look like. Mitch McConnell has repeatedly said... The structure for this
impeachment trial should track with the structure of the Clinton trial. We have a precedent here.
Don't worry, this is going to be modeled on exactly the same rules that were adopted unanimously in 1999 when Bill Clinton's impeachment trial was about to begin.
And Democrats have essentially been waiting to see what that looks like.
Is that actually going to be the case?
And for a long time now, we have expected to see a copy of this resolution, and it's not materializing.
Leader McConnell has still not come up with his proposal. That's unheard of.
And as the senators are debating these rules and Schumer is demanding to see what Senator McConnell is going to propose,
comes the deadline on Saturday evening for the White House to make its first filing in the impeachment trial.
And the president's lawyers lay out basically what they're going to argue in this trial.
They call on the Senate to swiftly reject these impeachment charges.
That's a quote from the filing.
And acquit the president because the charges themselves are without foundation and, in fact, would weaken the office of the presidency
if the Senate agreed to remove him for these charges.
The president's legal team, Alan Dershowitz,
Professor Emeritus at Harvard Law School,
also the author of the new book, Guilt by Association.
Professor Dershowitz, thank you for joining us.
Thank you.
Is it your position that President Trump should not be impeached
even if all the evidence and arguments laid out by the House are accepted as fact?
That's right.
Number one, they say.
The vote was to impeach on abuse of power, which is not within the constitutional criteria for impeachment, and obstruction of Congress.
The impeachment charges do not actually allege any violation of a law.
There's no crime here.
actually allege any violation of a law. There's no crime here. Abuse of power, they say, in the way that House Democrats have framed it, is essentially criminalizing the president doing his job.
Number two, they say all of the findings that came forth in the House impeachment inquiry,
the whole inquiry itself, is essentially fruits of a poison tree, that Democrats had a political vendetta against
President Trump and decided to impeach him at all costs. And so anything that was uncovered,
anything they unearthed in this inquiry is by definition illegitimate and can't really be
considered as part of an impeachment proceeding, that it's not really a constitutional thing because of the way Democrats conducted the inquiry.
And so shortly after the president's legal team files its brief,
Senator McConnell finally comes out with this draft of the resolution that he's going to offer
to govern the procedures for the trial.
For the rules.
For the rules, exactly.
And it looks a lot like the kinds of ground rules that the president's team would want
based on what they've said in their filing.
What do you mean?
Well, remember, Mitch McConnell kept saying that he was going to model these rules after
the trial rules for Bill Clinton's impeachment.
Under those rules, each side had 24 hours to argue their opening case
and could use as many days as it would take to do that.
In the Clinton trial, that meant three days on each side.
This resolution specifically limits the time frame to two days for each side.
So, yes, you can have 24 hours, but you've got to finish your argument within two days.
Why is that significant, one day?
Well, it means if you're going to compress it into two days, it means, first of all, very long days because you're starting at 1 p.m.
And if you're dividing 24 hours into two days, that's 12 hours.
You're going to 1 a.m.
That means a lot of these arguments unfolding at hours when most people are in bed and not watching or listening, which may be the point.
And secondly, it means a much faster trial overall.
It lets the president's defense put up their case much quicker.
But it also means that the entire opening phase of the trial is
basically over by the end of the week, and we're on to potentially a vote the following week.
So longer days, shorter trial, clearly a benefit for the president.
Right. Secondly, there was another key difference here, and that was that instead of just admitting
the House impeachment inquiry findings into evidence at the outset, which is what they did in the Clinton trial, this set of rules would say we'll print all of the materials that the House impeachment inquiry produced and distribute them to senators.
But actually, they will not be be considered until after we decide whether we're going to hear from witnesses, until after we decide whether we're going to hear new evidence not presented in the House inquiry.
And only then will it be subject to a vote whether or not to enter the House impeachment inquiry's findings into evidence. So even the facts established by the House inquiry, even the transcripts of interviews,
they're all up for debate in these rules
laid out by McConnell for the Senate trial.
That's right.
The Senate will convene as a court of impeachment.
Okay, so that's the situation on Tuesday
as the Senate convenes.
Right.
If there is no objection,
the Journal of Proceedings of the trial
are approved to date. The Senate convenes at one. If there is no objection, the Journal of Proceedings of the trial are approved to date.
The Senate convenes at one o'clock in the afternoon as an impeachment court with Chief
Justice John Roberts presiding from the dais with the House managers at a table to his
right and President Trump's legal team at a table to his left.
Chuck Schumer and Mitch McConnell are at their lecterns on either side of the aisle.
Mr. Chief Justice.
The majority leader is recognized.
And Senator McConnell.
For the further information of all senators, I'm about to send a resolution to the desk
providing for an outline of the next steps in these proceedings.
Calls up this package of rules and...
Senate Resolution 483.
The clerk stands up
and begins to read the
resolution. Which we, of course,
pretty much know already.
Right. McConnell's office put
out a copy of it on Monday night, so
I pretty much thought I knew what was in it.
I was sitting at my desk watching
this on TV and
kind of listening out of one ear.
Mm-hmm.
Including transcripts of public hearings or markups and any materials.
And I snapped to when I heard the word.
For a period of time not to exceed 24 hours over up to three session days.
Three instead of two days pertaining to how long each side would have to make their arguments.
And I thought to myself, did he just make a mistake?
And lo and behold, it was actually a change.
Somewhere between when Mitch McConnell put out that resolution of rules the night before
and the time the clerk got up to read it,
he had changed the number of days that
each side had to make their oral arguments from two to three. So more like the Clinton scenario.
Right. More like the Clinton rules. And there was another big change that I think we all missed when
he first read it out loud. Materials in this record will be admitted into evidence subject to any hearsay, evidentiary,
or other objections that the president may make after opening presentations are concluded.
McConnell dropped this idea of waiting until the trial is well underway to have a vote
on whether to admit the House impeachment inquiry findings into evidence.
This went back to the Clinton rules where they're admitted into evidence at the outset.
Right.
I mean, this is a genuine surprise on the floor of the United States Senate at a moment
where everything seems highly orchestrated to avoid any surprises.
So what explains this last minute surprise rollback to the old Clinton rules?
Well, what explains it, found out not long after, was that their Senate Republicans had gathered for lunch just before the trial got underway in a room in the Capitol not far from the Senate floor.
And during that private discussion, Susan Collins from Maine and Rob Portman from Ohio, two of the more moderate senators in the center of the Republican conference, said, we're going to have trouble with this.
We think this goes too far.
And they raised it with Senator McConnell.
And Lamar Alexander, we're told, was also not entirely pleased.
And I think it became clear very quickly to Senator McConnell that he was not going to have, potentially,
the votes to push this through
if he kept the rules the way they were.
And so he literally, you know,
with lines marked out by pen
and handwriting scrawled in the margins,
he changed it.
Wow. But just didn't announce it.
But didn't announce it
until the clerk started reading.
We'll be right back.
And Julie,
what's your understanding of the motivation
for Susan Collins, Rob Portman, Lamar Alexander to speak out and oppose McConnell on the rules that he first proposed?
These are senators who are deeply concerned about having a trial that appears to be fair.
Each of us will take an oath, an oath that I take very seriously to render impartial
justice. They want to make sure that they're not seen as going along with a process that
people are going to dismiss as a partisan exercise. You have consistently said you want to be careful
in what you say about this because you're in a role of a juror. Given that, you must be sharing the concern of Senator Murkowski that Senator McConnell out there saying we're going to be lockstep with the White House is going to cast some aspersions on this whole process? I have heard Democrats like Elizabeth Warren saying that the president
should be impeached, found guilty, and removed from office. I've heard the Senate majority
leaders saying that he's taking his cues from the White House. There are senators on both sides of the aisle who, to me, are not giving the appearance of and the reality of judging this in an impartial way.
I'm struck, and correct me if I'm wrong, Susan Collins is up for reelection and pretty tough re-election this fall up in Maine.
I have to imagine that on some level, this may be about something as simple as winning re-election
in a moderate state. Well, Senator Collins takes great offense at that suggestion, I can tell you
firsthand. But there is no question that she is facing a huge re-election challenge.
There's no question that she's under immense pressure. She knows that she already has the
reputation among Republicans as kind of a Benedict Arnold and someone who is insufficiently loyal
to Trump. She knows that she has a reputation among progressives as someone who always kind
of flirts with breaking from her party but never actually follows through or seldom does.
So she is really in a bind here.
And she's also a person who was there for President Clinton's trial.
She's an institutionalist in the Senate in a lot of ways.
And it is very important to her to have this be consistent
with the way they did things back then,
because it's hard enough to make this decision in the kind of political vice that she's in
without it looking like the process itself was broken.
I don't want to get too deep inside the head of a tactician in the Senate,
but I'm wondering if it's possible that Mitch McConnell is giving these moderate Republicans a victory on the rules
in order to fend off a bigger and far more consequential break over an issue like allowing
witnesses to come on the stand, witnesses like John Bolton, witnesses like Lev Parnas,
this associate of Rudy Giuliani.
In other words, I'll give you this, but don't ask for more.
I think there could be some of that going on here.
Mitch McConnell is a very shrewd strategist. He understands better than anyone the political bind that some of his members are in.
And he knows that the process could be the most important thing to keep his Republican conference in line behind him.
That as long as they feel like they have input and that this is fair, that he can sort of keep them in the fold.
But the minute they start feeling like it's not, the minute he starts having a big problem.
he starts having a big problem.
And so sometimes it's better to sort of propose something
that seems really out there
and let your moderates reign you in a bit
and allow the public to see
that they're playing that role
than to have them sort of not get any public credit
for actually influencing the debate.
Okay, so McConnell bends to the pressure that he's feeling
from the likes of Susan Collins
and delivers this pretty significant concession to the Democrats.
Are the Democrats satisfied with this?
Absolutely not.
The House managers on behalf of the House of Representatives
rise in opposition to Leader McConnell's resolution.
Let me begin by summarizing why.
Their argument here is that this inquiry was totally different than the Clinton inquiry.
The issue in the Clinton trial was not one of calling witnesses, but of recalling witnesses.
All of the key witnesses in the Clinton trial had testified before the grand jury or been interviewed by the FBI, one of them dozens of times, and their testimony was already known.
In that case, you had a White House who was willing to furnish witnesses, willing to furnish documents, and cooperated, even if not always willingly or happily, with the independent counsel who was investigating the case. Here, none of the witnesses we seek to call, none of them have testified or been interviewed by the
House. In this case, Democrats point out, the White House blocked everything. They blocked
witnesses. They refused to turn over even one page of documents. And so they say this issue
of witnesses has to be decided up front. The Senate
has to affirmatively pledge to hear from witnesses because otherwise there can't be a fair trial.
And that argument just is not flying with Republicans, even with the moderates who want
an opportunity down the line to consider hearing from witnesses. But they're not going to break
with precedent either and promise up front that that's going to happen.
The Democratic leader is recognized.
Mr. Chief Justice, I send an amendment to the desk to subpoena certain documents and records from the White House, and I ask that it be read.
So that's why Democrats immediately start to bring motions on the floor to change the rules,
to allow more new information to come out as part of this trial.
They start offering proposal after proposal. One, the chief justice of the United States, through the secretary of the Senate,
shall issue a subpoena to the acting chief of staff of the White House.
To subpoena White House documents, subpoena State Department documents.
All meetings and calls between President Trump
and the president of Ukraine
collected that pertain to the hold on military
and other complaints submitted by a whistleblower
within the intelligence community,
White House visitor records,
and email or text messages using personal...
The Democrats feel like the more they can spotlight the process of the
trial and make it clear that it's all subject to a vote and these few Republican senators may hold
the key to whether the American people hear some of the information that they didn't get to hear
during the House impeachment inquiry, the better off they are. Because either it's going to result
in more information coming out or it's going to result in a lot more political pressure and maybe political
damage to the Republicans who stay in line. So at the end of the day, it feels like just
about everything in this stage of the impeachment trial is really about these three or four, maybe five moderate Republican senators and
pushing them, if you're Democrats, every single day, trying to rattle them on this question of
whether the trial is unfair, whether this is a cover-up, making sure that message reaches
their district. And for Republicans to do everything possible to accommodate their needs,
make them feel like this is a their needs, make them feel like
this is a fair trial, make them feel like this is fine. That's really what this trial is about now.
Right. And so everything that comes up in terms of rules, in terms of how to go forward about this
trial has to be looked at with an eye toward what is going to pass muster
for this small group of Republicans that is not automatically bought into the process.
Thank you, Julie.
Thank you, Michael.
In the early hours of Wednesday morning,
Senate Republicans were poised to adopt McConnell's revised rules for the impeachment trial after rejecting repeated attempts by Senate Democrats
to change those rules to include new witnesses and documents.
In remarks, Senator Schumer praised the moderate Republican senators
and appealed to them for additional help.
The public is realizing how unfair Leader McConnell's resolution is,
and they are telling Republican senators to change it.
We're very glad they moved to three days instead of two,
so we won't be hearing arguments at two in the morning.
It's good they admitted evidence,
but the real test will be witnesses and documents.
Will our Republican senators put pressure on McConnell
so that we really have witnesses and documents produced,
either now or after the arguments are made.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
On Tuesday, medical officials said that a mysterious virus that began in China,
where it killed at least nine people,
has now appeared in the United States.
A man in Washington state who had been traveling in China
became the first confirmed U.S. case of the illness,
known as the coronavirus.
As a result, several major U.S. airports
in New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco
have begun screening travelers for the virus.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.