Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

California Governor Candidate Stirs Outrage With Auschwitz ‘Unemployment Plan’ Post

2 hours ago

Gold Price to Stay Above $3,000/Oz as Flight to Safety Endures

4 hours ago

Trump Warns Iran That Its Nuclear Sites Could Be Bombed Again

4 hours ago

Israel Announces Daily Pauses in Gaza Fighting as Aid Airdrops Begin

1 day ago

California School Board Resigns After Audit Reveals $180M in Improper Funding

2 days ago

Fresno Crash Leaves One Dead After Car Submerges in Canal

2 days ago

A First Look at Fresno State’s Quarterback Battle

3 days ago

Israeli Columnist Alleges Ethnic Cleansing Plan in Gaza

3 days ago
Senate Opens to Hear Articles of Impeachment Against Trump
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
January 16, 2020

Share

WASHINGTON — The Senate opens its historic proceedings against President Donald Trump on Thursday with a formal reading of the charges by House prosecutors, followed by the arrival at the Capitol of Chief Justice John Roberts, who will swear in all 100 senators as jurors for only the third impeachment trial in U.S. history.
The chamber begins to transform itself into an impeachment court at noon following a second day of ceremonial protocol that shifts the proceedings out of Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s Democratic-run House to the Republican-majority Senate.
The House lawmakers prosecuting the case will read the charges to the Senate, then, later in the day, Roberts will administer the jurors’ oath to senators who swear to deliver “impartial justice.”
The events, unfolding during an election year as Trump seeks another term, will be a test not only of his presidency but also of the nation’s three branches of power and its system of checks and balances. Several senators are running for the Democratic party’s nomination to challenge Trump in November.
The president calls the impeachment a “hoax,” even as new information emerges about his actions toward Ukraine that led to the charges against him.
He faces a charge that he abused his presidential power by pressuring Ukraine to investigate Democratic rival Joe Biden, using military aid to the country as leverage. Trump was also charged with obstructing Congress’ ensuing probe.
Ahead of the proceedings the Government Accountability office said Thursday that the White House violated federal law in withholding the security assistance to Ukraine, which shares a border with hostile Russia.

Photo of Nancy Pelosi signing the resolution to transmit the articles of impeachment
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., signs the resolution to transmit the two articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump to the Senate for trial on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2020. The two articles of impeachment against Trump are for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

‘What Is the President Hiding?’

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell opened the chamber Thursday decrying Pelosi’s decision to hand out “souvenir pens” after she signed the resolution to transmit the charges to the Senate.

“Today we will make history. This president will be held accountable.”House Speaker Nancy Pelosi 
“This final display neatly distilled the House’s entire partisan process into one perfect visual,” McConnell said. “’It was a transparently partisan process from beginning to end.”
Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer renewed his party’s request that the trial include new witnesses and documents not available for the House impeachment proceedings.
“What is the president hiding? What is he afraid of?’’ Schumer said.
“The gravity of these charges is self-evident,” he said. “The House of Representatives have accused the president of trying to shake down a foreign leader for personal gain.”
The president has suggested recently that he would be open to a quick vote to simply dismiss the charges, but sufficient Republican support is lacking for that. Still, an eventual vote to acquit Trump is considered highly likely.
On Wednesday, in a dramatic procession across the U.S. Capitol, House Democrats carried the charges to the Senate.
“Today we will make history,” Pelosi said as she signed the documents, using multiple pens to hand out and mark the moment. “This president will be held accountable.”
Moments later the prosecutors walked solemnly through the stately hall, filing into the Senate back row as the clerk of the House announced the arrival: “The House has passed House Resolution 798, a resolution appointing and authorizing managers of the impeachment trial of Donald John Trump, president of United States.”

On Wednesday, Schiff Released New Records From Lev Parnas

Opening arguments are to begin next Tuesday after the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.
Earlier Wednesday, the House voted 228-193, almost entirely along party lines, ending a weeks-long delay to deliver the charges with a tally reflecting the nation’s split.
The top Republican in the House, Kevin McCarthy of California, said Americans will look back on this “sad saga” that tried to remove the president from office with the “weakest case.”
The president’s team expects acquittal with a Senate trial lasting no more than two weeks, according to senior administration officials. That would be far shorter than the trial of President Bill Clinton, in 1999, or the first one, of President Andrew Johnson, in 1868. Both were acquitted.
The seven-member prosecution team is led by the chairmen of the House impeachment proceedings, Reps. Adam Schiff of the Intelligence Committee and Jerrold Nadler of the Judiciary Committee, two of Pelosi’s top lieutenants.
On Wednesday, Schiff released new records from Lev Parnas, an associate of Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, about the Ukraine strategy, including an exchange with another man about surveilling later-fired U.S. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch.
Schiff said the new evidence should bring more pressure on McConnell, who is reluctant to allow witnesses to testify and prefers swift acquittal. The White House has instructed officials not to comply with House subpoenas for testimony and documents.

Photo of President Donald Trump
President Donald Trump speaks before signing a trade agreement with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, in the East Room of the White House, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Romney Said He Wants to Hear From John Bolton

“The challenge is to get a fair trial,” Schiff said in an interview with The Associated Press. “It shouldn’t be a challenge — if the senators are really going to live up to their oath to be impartial, they’ll want a fair trial. That’s obviously not where Mitch McConnell is coming from.”

“The challenge is to get a fair trial. It shouldn’t be a challenge — if the senators are really going to live up to their oath to be impartial, they’ll want a fair trial. That’s obviously not where Mitch McConnell is coming from.” — House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff
The managers are a diverse group with legal, law enforcement and military experience, including Hakeem Jeffries of New York, Sylvia Garcia of Texas, Val Demings of Florida, Jason Crow of Colorado and Zoe Lofgren of California.
Two are freshman lawmakers — Crow a former Army Ranger who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, Garcia a former judge in Houston. Demings is the former police chief of Orlando and Jeffries is a lawyer and member of party leadership. Lofgren has the rare credential of having worked on the congressional staff investigation of President Richard Nixon’s impeachment — he resigned before the full House voted on the charges — and then being an elected lawmaker during Clinton’s.
Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine is leading an effort among some Republicans, including Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, to consider Senate witnesses. She told reporters she was satisfied the rules will allow votes on that.
Romney said he wants to hear from John Bolton, the former national security adviser at the White House, who others have said raised alarms about the alternative foreign policy toward Ukraine being run by Giuliani.
Any four senators could force an outcome. Republicans control the chamber, 53-47, but it takes just 51 votes during the trial to approve rules or call witnesses. It also would take only 51 senators to vote to dismiss the charges against Trump.

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Spirit Airlines to Furlough 270 Pilots, Demote 140 More on Downsized Schedule

DON'T MISS

Fresno’s Mission Thrift Has Its Third Fire in Recent Weeks

DON'T MISS

Multiple People Shot in Nevada Casino, AP Reports

DON'T MISS

Trump Says Many Are Starving in Gaza, Vows to Set up Food Centers

DON'T MISS

US Judge Blocks Trump-Backed Medicaid Cuts to Planned Parenthood

DON'T MISS

Thailand and Cambodia Approve Ceasefire After Five-Day Border Battle

DON'T MISS

Madera County Deputies Searching for Stolen $300K Caterpillar Grader

DON'T MISS

UN Meets to Urge Support for Two-State Solution but US, Israel Boycott

DON'T MISS

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Barbie Nicole Hall

DON'T MISS

California Governor Candidate Stirs Outrage With Auschwitz ‘Unemployment Plan’ Post

UP NEXT

US Judge Blocks Trump-Backed Medicaid Cuts to Planned Parenthood

UP NEXT

Trump Asks for Swift Deposition of Murdoch in Epstein Defamation Case

UP NEXT

Democratic North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper Launches US Senate Bid

UP NEXT

3 Men Who Disappeared While Fishing in Mississippi River Are Found Dead

UP NEXT

Trump Warns Iran That Its Nuclear Sites Could Be Bombed Again

UP NEXT

Trump, EU’s Von Der Leyen to Meet on Sunday to Clinch Trade Deal

UP NEXT

NASA Says 20% of Workforce to Depart Space Agency

UP NEXT

Trump Golfs in Scotland as Epstein Questions Persist

UP NEXT

US Judge Reaffirms Nationwide Injunction Blocking Trump Executive Order on Birthright Citizenship

UP NEXT

White House Will Release $5.5 Billion for Schools, After Surprise Delay

Trump Says Many Are Starving in Gaza, Vows to Set up Food Centers

1 hour ago

US Judge Blocks Trump-Backed Medicaid Cuts to Planned Parenthood

2 hours ago

Thailand and Cambodia Approve Ceasefire After Five-Day Border Battle

2 hours ago

Madera County Deputies Searching for Stolen $300K Caterpillar Grader

2 hours ago

UN Meets to Urge Support for Two-State Solution but US, Israel Boycott

2 hours ago

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Barbie Nicole Hall

2 hours ago

California Governor Candidate Stirs Outrage With Auschwitz ‘Unemployment Plan’ Post

2 hours ago

California May Soon Ban Selling New Glocks Like Kamala Harris Owns

2 hours ago

Tulare County Authorities Searching for Two Armed Suspects After Terra Bella Carjacking

3 hours ago

State Zeroes In on the Sinking San Joaquin Valley

3 hours ago

Spirit Airlines to Furlough 270 Pilots, Demote 140 More on Downsized Schedule

Spirit Airlines said on Monday it will furlough about 270 pilots while demoting another 140, as the cash-strapped budget carrier looks to sc...

2 minutes ago

A Spirit commercial airliner prepares to land at San Diego International Airport in San Diego, California, U.S., January 18, 2024. (Reuters File)
2 minutes ago

Spirit Airlines to Furlough 270 Pilots, Demote 140 More on Downsized Schedule

Fresno firefighters responded to a third fire in recent weeks at the Fresno Mission on Sunday, July 27, 2025, with no injuries reported and the cause still under investigation. (Google Maps)
26 minutes ago

Fresno’s Mission Thrift Has Its Third Fire in Recent Weeks

Photo of caution tape
1 hour ago

Multiple People Shot in Nevada Casino, AP Reports

Displaced Palestinians who have not received humanitarian aid gather as they survive on leftover food, amid a hunger crisis, in Gaza, July 28, 2025. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
1 hour ago

Trump Says Many Are Starving in Gaza, Vows to Set up Food Centers

Pro-planned parenthood and pro-abortion activists demonstrate after the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for South Carolina to strip Planned Parenthood of funding under the Medicaid health insurance program in a ruling that bolsters efforts by Republican-led states to deprive the reproductive healthcare and abortion provider of public money, outside the court in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 26, 2025. (Reuters File)
2 hours ago

US Judge Blocks Trump-Backed Medicaid Cuts to Planned Parenthood

Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim looks on as Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Manet and Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai take part in mediation talks on the Thailand–Cambodia border conflict, in Putrajaya, Malaysia July 28, 2025.
2 hours ago

Thailand and Cambodia Approve Ceasefire After Five-Day Border Battle

Authorities in Madera County are searching for a stolen Caterpillar motor grader ( similar to the one pictured) worth $300,000 that was taken from a work site late Sunday, July 27, 2025, night. (Madera County SO)
2 hours ago

Madera County Deputies Searching for Stolen $300K Caterpillar Grader

People rally in front of the United Nations headquarters during a "Stop Starving Gaza Now" protest amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in New York City, U.S., July 25, 2025. (Reuters File)
2 hours ago

UN Meets to Urge Support for Two-State Solution but US, Israel Boycott

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend