Trump prosecutors pitch to the public in
made-for-TV impeachment trial
Democrats hope harrowing audio and video from Capitol
attack will make plain what no legal argument might deny
Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol in January.
Impeachment managers are expected to draw previously unseen footage from
police, from the media, and from live-streams captured by the insurrectionists
themselves,
Impeachment managers are expected to draw previously
unseen footage from police, from the media and from live streams captured by
the insurrectionists themselves,
Tom
McCarthy
@TeeMcSee
Tue 9 Feb
2021 07.02 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/09/trump-impeachment-prosecutors-trial-made-for-tv
The lethal
Capitol invasion by Donald Trump supporters that is at the heart of the former
president’s second impeachment trial happened more than a month ago. But
Democrats leading the prosecution of Trump are counting on an element of
surprise.
Surprise,
the impeachment prosecutors are calculating, because while most Americans
understand the broad outlines of what happened during the 6 January attack on
the Capitol, relatively few have come to grips with the shocking audio and
video footage from that day – portraying a cauldron of violence, vandalism,
bloodlust and fear.
And in what
is shaping up as history’s first made-for-TV impeachment trial, Democrats are
planning to make some of these surreal scenes the centerpiece of their case
against the only president ever to be impeached twice.
A police
officer crushed in a doorway. A woman wearing a Trump flag shot in the neck.
Mobs in Trump gear breaking doors and smashing glass, and hunting the halls of
legislature for members to tear “into little pieces”. Staffers for the House
speaker, Nancy Pelosi, huddled under a conference table, sending texts for
help, as rioters pound on the doors. A woman trampled to death as her friend
begs for space.
And the
chants: “The steal is real!”, “Hang Mike Pence!” and “USA! USA! USA!”
A Senate
split 50-50 will act as jury at the trial, and Trump is expected to retain
enough Republican support to avoid conviction and a ban on his holding future
office.
But the
prosecutors’ case as previewed this week is not principally directed at
lawmakers. Instead, it is unmistakably pitched to the public.
Impeachment
managers led by Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland are expected to draw on
hours of previously unseen footage from body cameras worn by police, from the
media and from live streams captured by the insurrectionists themselves to
produce what is shaping up as a shocking inside account of the Capitol attack.
With unique
access to evidence gathered by law enforcement officers in nearly 140 cases
related to the invasion so far, the prosecutors will try to break through
calcifying versions on both sides of the political aisle of what happened, and
to provoke a new reckoning with how close the country came to an act of mass
violence inside the halls of government.
That
realization, they think, could jolt a reconsideration of Trump’s guilt for the
article of impeachment with which he has been charged: incitement of
insurrection.
The
Huffington Post politics reporter Igor Bobic was inside the Capitol that day –
but outside either legislative chamber – and captured some of the most notable
footage of the invasion.
“One month
since the attack and I’m still learning harrowing details about the day,” he
tweeted at the weekend. “Staffers I haven’t seen since recalling how they
barricaded themselves in offices in terror. Members telling me how they
followed my feed on their phone while in the chamber in disbelief. Reporters
still trying to make sense of it all. All of us still coping.”
Last month
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who was forced into hiding during the
invasion, described hearing threats from insurrectionists and told thousands of
followers on Instagram Live: “I thought I was going to die.”
Trump’s
defense team seemed to sense the danger to their case that the video scenes
represented, and in a brief submitted on Monday they floated multiple
pre-emptive responses.
Heatedly
condemning the attack on the Capitol and denying Trump’s complicity, the
defense accused Democrats of “a brazen attempt to further glorify violence” by
presenting the facts of the case. In a footnote, the lawyers went so far as to
suggest that the crowd was a mix of pro-Trump and anti-Trump elements.
But the
footage may make plain what no legal argument might deny. The crowd proceeded
from a rally at which Trump spoke and arrived at the Capitol wearing red hats
and Trump 2020 flags, mixed in with militia patches, white supremacy group
insignia, Confederate flags and illegal firearms and knives.
In an
initial brief submitted last week, the impeachment managers described Trump’s
“singular responsibility for the assault”, mustering dozens of quotations in
which the former president spread the falsehood of a stolen election, demanded
intervention, then “summoned a mob to Washington, exhorted them into a frenzy,
and aimed them like a loaded cannon down Pennsylvania Avenue”.
Trump’s
quotes were expected to be juxtaposed with scenes of violence at the Capitol,
as prosecutors hope to make a case that will drive home their charges against
the former president.
“We cannot,
for a moment, treat the attack of 1/6 as something normal that happened,”
tweeted Andy Kim, a Democratic representative from New Jersey. “It was a truly
dark day in our nation’s history and it deserves a response of that magnitude.”
It may be
history’s first made-for-TV impeachment. But as for President Joe Biden, his
press secretary, Jen Psaki, said his attention would be elsewhere: “He will not
spend too much time watching the proceedings.”


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