CONGRESS
GOP castigates ‘terrible job’ by Trump legal team
Still, Trump's attorney told reporters that he didn’t
expect any changes to the legal team or its structure of arguments.
By BURGESS
EVERETT, ANDREW DESIDERIO and MARIANNE LEVINE
02/09/2021
07:11 PM EST
Updated:
02/09/2021 07:35 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/09/gop-trump-legal-team-impeachment-468130
House
Democrats started former President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial with a
well-executed video and direct speakers. Trump’s defense opened with a rambling
bit by lead lawyer Bruce Castor that conceded the House presentation was “well
done” and their arguments would be answered later.
The
contrast was not lost on the jury.
“The House
managers were focused. They were organized. They relied upon both precedent,
the Constitution and legal scholars. They made a compelling argument. President
Trump’s team were disorganized. They did everything they could but to talk
about the question at hand,” said Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.). “And when they
talked about it, they kind of glided over, almost as if they were embarrassed
of their arguments.”
Cassidy
even voted with 55 other senators that the trial should go forward and was not
unconstitutional, changing his position from last month. “If I’m an impartial
juror and one side is doing a great job and the other job is doing a terrible
job on the issue at hand? As an impartial juror, I’m going to vote for the side
that did the good job.”
Cassidy’s
shift was the most electric moment of the day and highlighted what could only
be seen as an incoherent defense by Castor. The Trump lawyer singled out
senators who are mulling conviction and conceded he had changed his entire
presentation after three of the House impeachment managers, led by Rep. Jamie
Raskin (D-Md.), made their opening arguments.
“I thought
the first attorney for the president today did not present a case, which
surprised me. Did not make any arguments,” said Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine),
who also voted to uphold the constitutionality of the trial. “The second
attorney representing the president clearly did, and did a competent job. I’m
puzzled by the presentation of the first attorney.”
David
Schoen, the second attorney, offered a more conventional presentation appealing
to the GOP. But he bobbled the timeline of the impeachment trial, blaming House
Democrats for declining to send the article until Trump was out of office. Yet
the Senate was on recess during that period — which made it impossible for
Trump's trial to start without the Senate deciding to reconvene on an emergency
basis.
Generally,
Republicans were warmer on Schoen. But Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), a former
state Supreme Court judge and state attorney general, conceded of the
presentation: “Not one of the finest I’ve seen.
“The first
lawyer, just rambled on and on and on and didn't really address the
constitutional argument,” Cornyn said. ”Finally the second lawyer got around to
it.”
“I was
really stunned by the first attorney who presented for the former President
Trump, couldn’t figure out where he was going. He spent 45 minutes going
somewhere,” said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska). “Mr. Schoen did a better job,
but I think they sure had a missed opportunity with their first attorney.”
Cassidy
said he leaned over to Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) at one point and asked if Castor
and Schoen, another attorney, were confronting the day’s issue: whether the
trial was constitutional. Cassidy said Cruz replied: “Not now.”
“I don't
think the lawyers did the most effective job,” Cruz told reporters later.
“The House
managers did a much better job,” Cassidy said, in summary.
Schoen
later said of Cassidy’s criticism: “I’m sorry he felt that way.” Castor merely
said the attorneys had a “good day.”
During one
portion of the arguments, Castor mentioned Sens. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), Bob Casey
(D-Pa.) and Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), referring to Toomey colloquially as “Pat” and
throwing out unnamed Nebraska court cases in a nod to Sasse. Both senators
voted with Democrats to uphold the constitutionality of the trial.
Sasse was
squinting while Castor was talking about him, seemingly confused at what he was
hearing. He then turned to Sens. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) and Rob Portman (R-Ohio),
and his fellow Nebraska Republican Deb Fischer turned her back to whisper
something to him.
“I think we
spent too much time maybe visiting about Pat Toomey and Casey,” said Sen. Joni
Ernst (R-Iowa).
Still,
Schoen told reporters later Tuesday that he didn’t expect any changes to the
legal team or its structure of arguments. Senators amenable to the Trump team’s
position chalked it up to a lack of preparation. Trump’s first legal team fell
apart barely a week ago, leaving Castor and Schoen to quickly devise a strategy
to defend Trump.
“It’s a
tough assignment,” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who is against the impeachment
process, said of Castor’s role. “This is a very different kind of jury. And I
don’t think he’s been on the case very long and he hasn’t had the same time to
prepare. My sense is he probably did the best he could given the
circumstances.”
Cassidy was
the only Republican who flipped his vote after last month’s initial tally on a
procedural motion on the trial's constitutionality. Despite the browbeating
Trump’s team took Tuesday from Republican jurors, GOP senators said it was
further evidence that Trump is on a glide path to an acquittal.
“I think
that says a lot,” Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) said. “The biggest thing it says is
it’s going to be hard to do anything from this point forward.”


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