IMPEACHMENT
Trump was quite displeased with his impeachment
defense team
The president was frustrated with the meandering
arguments. Some close to his defense team quit watching.
By GABBY
ORR and MERIDITH MCGRAW
02/09/2021
05:57 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/09/trump-impeachment-team-468112
For former
President Donald Trump, the opening day of his second impeachment trial did not
go as planned or to his liking.
Cocooned at
his Mar-a-Lago estate, Trump watched as his defense attorneys responded to an
emotional presentation by House impeachment managers with a series of dry,
technical and at times meandering arguments about due process and the
constitutionality of the proceedings. As they droned on, he grew increasingly
frustrated with the sharp contrast between their muted response and the
prosecution’s opening salvo, according to two people familiar with his
thinking.
"President
Trump was not happy with the performance of his legal team in action,” said one
of the people familiar with his thinking.
It didn’t
help that his lead attorney, former Pennsylvania prosecutor Bruce Castor,
name-checked Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), who just days ago slammed his state party
for their “weird worship” of Trump. Castor also referred to Trump as the
“former president,” conceding that he had in fact lost the 2020 election when
he was removed by “smart” voters last November.
Trump,
according to those familiar with his thinking, saw his legal team’s performance
as a missed opportunity and also was annoyed by the public criticism of his
attorneys. And he wasn’t the only one.
Some people
close to the president’s defense team said they quit watching the proceedings
out of sheer frustration with Castor’s presentation and were confused by his
refusal to use graphics or a video––tools his TV-obsessed client had hoped to
deploy.
At one
point during Castor’s remarks, the right-wing network Newsmax––which Trump had
been watching throughout the day, according to a person familiar with his
viewing habits––cut away to a segment featuring the ex-president’s former
impeachment attorney Alan Dershowitz.
“I have no
idea what he is doing,” Dershowitz said of Castor, shaking his head
dismissively. “The American people are entitled to an argument… but this, just,
after all kinds of very strong presentations on the part of the House managers…
it does not appear to me to be effective advocacy.”
Dershowitz’s
assessment was later shared on Twitter by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fl.), a steadfast
Trump ally who offered to resign from Congress last week to represent Trump
himself.
“Explosive
interview,” Gaetz said of the clip.
George
Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley, who met with GOP senators
ahead of the trial to brief them on theories about its constitutionality,
suggested Castor spent too much time focusing on extraneous arguments before
arriving at the core of Trump’s defense.
“I am
surprised by the exhaustion of so much time before addressing the concrete and
compelling constitutional arguments,” Turley said in a text message. “They have
a finite amount of time but you could not tell that this long opening.”
The
decidedly frosty reaction from Trump and his allies mirrored the reviews that
some GOP Senators offered upon leaving the chamber. And it raised a variety of
questions: would the ex-president demand an adjustment of strategy? Was he
regretting not appearing himself? And, most intriguing, what would his
offerings be if he still had a Twitter account?
Trump’s own
attorneys seemed to concede that their presentation wasn’t quite on par with
the one offered by the House impeachment managers, who used their time on the
floor to remind Senators of the harrowing scenes that took place on Capitol
grounds with a dramatic video that juxtaposed Trump’s speech on Jan. 6 with his
supporters violently breaking through security barriers and clashing with
bloodied police officers.
“I'll be
quite frank with you,” Castor said at one point, “we changed what we were going
to do on account that we thought that the House managers' presentation was
well-done. And I wanted you to know that we have responses to those things.”
According
to initial plans for the trial, Trump attorney David Schoen was expected to
begin arguments. But an aide to Trump said that, at the last minute, they
decided to let Castor go first as part of a “very clear, deliberative
strategy.”
“This is
about lowering the temperature from the Democrats’ emotionally charged opening
argument before dropping the hammer on the unconstitutional nature of this
impeachment witch hunt,” the aide said.
Despite the
rockiness of the presentation and the bad reviews for it, only one Republican
Senator seemed swayed by the proceedings. Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., who
initially voted that the trial was unconstitutional because it involved a
former president, changed his mind on Tuesday, joining only five other
Republicans to affirm the constitutionality of the impeachment trial. The
Senate will move ahead with the trial on Wednesday afternoon.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário