IMPEACHMENT
Tuberville comments help fuel House case against
Trump
Impeachment managers intend to rest their case
Thursday after discussing Trump's "lack of remorse."
By KYLE
CHENEY and ANDREW DESIDERIO
02/11/2021
10:17 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/11/trump-impeachment-trial-day-3-468588
Sen. Tommy
Tuberville revealed late Wednesday that he spoke to then-President Donald Trump
on Jan. 6, just as a violent mob closed in on the Senate, and informed Trump
that then-Vice President Mike Pence had just been evacuated from the chamber.
“I said
‘Mr. President, they just took the vice president out, I’ve got to go,'” the
Alabama Republican told POLITICO on Capitol Hill, saying he cut the phone call
short amid the chaos.
Tuberville’s
recollection is a new and potentially significant addition to the timeline of
Trump’s reaction to the violent mob of his supporters as it stormed the
Capitol. Aides to the House impeachment managers, entering the second day of
opening arguments, indicated the new details may come up before they rest their
case Thursday and turn the trial over to Trump's defense team.
House
Democrats prosecuting Trump’s case in a Senate impeachment trial have
emphasized that Trump took little action to address the rioters despite
desperate entreaties from his allies. Tuberville’s recollection of the call is
the first indication that Trump was specifically aware of the danger Pence
faced as the mob encroached on the Senate chamber.
Just as
significantly, the call occurred at virtually the same moment Trump fired off a
tweet attacking Pence for lacking “courage” to unilaterally attempt to overturn
the presidential election results — a tweet that came after Pence and his
family were rushed from the Senate chamber.
Senior
aides to the House impeachment managers said Thursday that they considered
Tuberville’s comments to be new information that confirms their case that Trump
abandoned Pence and Congress to the mob rather than attempting to quell the
violence.
“It squares
with what we already know, that the president knew his vice president was in
danger and did nothing,” said one of the aides, adding, “We will have more to
speak on that point today.”
It’s long
been unclear precisely when Trump learned of the danger that Congress and his
vice president faced — though it was broadcast all over live television — but
Tuberville’s claim would mark a specific moment Trump was notified that Pence
had to be evacuated for his own safety.
The House
impeached Trump last month for inciting the Jan. 6 insurrection and began
mounting their case in the trial Wednesday, the first of two days to present
their evidence. The Tuberville call was among their examples to show that Trump
remained fixated on stopping President Joe Biden’s victory even as it became
clear that pro-Trump insurrectionists were ransacking the Capitol. Trump, they
said, did nothing to publicly call off the rioters and instead phoned
Tuberville to ask him to aid the effort to stop the transition of power.
As House
impeachment managers prepare to wrap up their case Thursday, their top aides
also previewed a final aspect of their arguments: that in the aftermath of the
Capitol violence, Trump showed no remorse for his conduct and incitement.
House
managers say the Trump-Tuberville call took place shortly after 2 p.m. Pence
was evacuated from the chamber at about 2:15 p.m., and Trump sent his tweet
attacking Pence at 2:24 p.m. The entire Senate was cleared by about 2:30 p.m.
The
existence of the call between Trump and Tuberville, though not the specifics,
has been previously reported.
The
managers noted that while the mob encroached on the Senate chamber, Trump was
ignoring his allies’ pleas for him to publicly call them off. Instead, Trump
accidentally phoned Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) as he sought to get in touch with
Tuberville and request that the Alabama senator continue objecting to the
election results in order to buy time. Lee, according to reports in Utah’s
Deseret News, the Salt Lake Tribune and CNN, passed his phone to the
newly-elected lawmaker for the brief call. Lee on Wednesday night objected on
the Senate floor to how his role in the call was portrayed.
Aides to
the former president did not immediately return a request for comment.
Burgess
Everett and Meridith McGraw contributed to this report.


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