Trump impeachment trial: Closing arguments ahead of acquittal vote Wednesday

Democrat Adam Schiff made an impassioned plea but the vote seemed set.

Senate hears closing arguments from both sides as impeachment trial nears end

A vote on President Trump's acquittal is set for Wednesday afternoon

Democrats counter GOP argument that Trump's conduct 'improper' but not 'impeachable'

President Donald Trump's impeachment trial resumed Monday with closing arguments -- even though the outcome appears all but certain ahead of a final vote on acquittal set for Wednesday.

PHOTO: The Senate trial begins closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump at the Capitol, Feb. 3, 2020.
The Senate trial begins closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump at the Capitol, Feb. 3, 2020.
ABC News

Even though the trial continues, Trump has said he will go to the Capitol Tuesday to deliver his State of the Union address, as President Bill Clinton did during his 1999 trial. It wasn't clear, though, whether he would mention his impeachment.

Monday's arguments come after the Senate voted 51-49 Friday to reject calling any new witnesses -- a critical defeat for Democrats. Only GOP Sens. Susan Collins and Mitt Romney voted to hear witnesses -- while two other other Republicans Democrats were hoping would join them -- Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Lamar Alexander -- voted no.

PHOTO: White House counsel Pat Cipollone speaks during closing arguments during the  impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
White House counsel Pat Cipollone speaks during closing arguments during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

On Sunday, Alexander further explained his rationale he first made in a statement Thursday night ahead of Friday vote -- that while he considered the president's conduct in the Ukraine affair "inappropriate," it didn't, in his view, rise to the level of an impeachable offense and that it was up to voters -- not the Senate -- to decide how to deal with it.

PHOTO: Lead House impeachment manager Rep. Adam Schiff delivers his closing argument in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
Lead House impeachment manager Rep. Adam Schiff delivers his closing argument in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

The ABC News team of correspondents and producers is covering every aspect of this story.

PHOTO: In this screengrab taken from a Senate Television webcast, House manager Rep. Adam Schiff speaks during impeachment proceedings against U.S. President Donald Trump in the Senate at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 3, 2020, in Washington, DC.
In this screengrab taken from a Senate Television webcast, House manager Rep. Adam Schiff speaks during impeachment proceedings against U.S. President Donald Trump in the Senate at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 3, 2020, in Washington, DC.
Senate Television via Getty Images

7 p.m. Murkowski will vote to acquit

In a floor speech, the Alaska Republican said she will vote to acquit Trump on both articles of impeachment.

"I cannot vote to convict," she declared in a speech in which she blasted her colleagues on both sides of the aisle for a flawed, partisan process. "The Constitution provides for impeachment but does not demand it in all instances."

"The House failed in its responsibilities," she said, adding that members on both sides have not had an "open mind" throughout the process. She also took aim at Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer for sending letters to the press in December about the need for additional witnesses and documents before a deal was cut with his counterpart, Sen. Mitch McConnell.

"The Senate should be ashamed of the rank partisanship displayed here," Murkowski said.

She did concede that the president's handling of the Ukraine phone call was wrong, calling his behavior "shameful," but said it's up to the voters to make their judgment on Election Day.

"Where do we go from here?" she asked rhetorically.

"So many in this chamber share my sadness for the present state of our institutions. It’s my hope that we’ve finally found bottom here," she said.

-- ABC News' Mariam Kahn

3:03 p.m. Schiff to senators who vote to acquit: 'Your name will be tied to his with a cord of steel and for all of history'

Lead House Manager Adam Schiff, in an impassioned closing, argues that the president will not change -- and that Trump himself has made this point clear "without self-awareness of hesitation."

"You can't trust this president to do the right thing not for one minute not for one election not for the sake of our country. You just can't. He will not change and you know it," Schiff says.

"Trump could offer Alaska to the Russians in exchange for support in the next election, or decide to move to Mar-a-Lago permanently and let Jared Kushner run the country, delegating to him the decision whether to go to war. Because those things are not necessarily criminal, this argument would allow that he could not be impeached for such abuses of power. Of course this would be absurd. more than absurd it would be dangerous," Schiff says.

"I will tell you one hundred percent not 5 not 10 or even fifty but one hundred percent. If you have found him guilty and you do not remove him from office he will continue trying to cheat in the election until he succeeds. Then what shall you say what shall you say if Russia again interferes in our election and Donald Trump does nothing but celebrate their efforts? What shall you say if Ukraine capitulates and announces investigations into the president’s rivals?

"It is midnight in Washington, the lights are finally going out in the Capitol after a long day in the impeachment trial of Donald J. Trump. The Senate heard arguments only hours earlier on whether to call witnesses and require the administration to withhold documents it has withheld. Counsel for the President still maintains the President’s innocence while opposing any additional evidence that would prove otherwise. It is midnight in Washington. But on this night, not all the lights have been extinguished. Somewhere in the bowels of the Justice Department, Donald Trump’s Justice Department,a light remains on. Someone has waited until the country is asleep to hit send to inform the court in a filing due that day that the justice department, the department that would represent Justice, is refusing to produce documents directly bearing on the president's decision to withhold military aid from Ukraine. The Trump Administration has them. It is not turning them over, and it does not want the Senate to know until it is too late. Send. That's what happened last Friday night when you left home for the weekend.

"I hope and pray that we never have a president like Donald Trump in the Democratic Party one that would betray the national interest in the country's security to help with his re-election and I would hope to God that if we did we would impeach him and Democrats would lead the way but I suppose you never know just how difficult that is," he says.

"I think we all know that not because it will be written by Never Trumpers but because whenever we have departed from the values of our nation we have come to regret it and that regret is written all over the pages of our history if you find that the House has proved its case and still vote to acquit your name will be tied to his with a cord of steel and for all of history, but if you find the courage to stand up to him to speak the awful truth to his rank falsehood, your place will be among the Davids who took on Goliath -- if only you will say, 'Enough!'"

"They gave you a remedy and they meant for you to use it they gave you an oath and they meant for you to observe it we have proven Donald Trump guilty now do impartial Justice and convict him," he ends with and the Senate trial is adjourned until Wednesday's final vote.

PHOTO: House Manager Rep. Zoe Lofgren speaks during closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020.
House manager Rep. Zoe Lofgren speaks during closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020.
ABC News

2:36 p.m. Lofgren: 'If impeachment in election years was not to be, our founders would have said so'

Responding to Trump's legal team closing arguments, House managers argue that the president will continue this behavior, noting that he "has not apologized" or offered to change in any way.

"We cannot simply hope that this president will realize that he has done wrong, or inappropriate, and hope that he does better. We have done that so many other times. We know that he has not apologized. He has not offered to change. We all know that he will do it again. What President Trump did this time pierces the heart of who we are as a country. We must stop him from further harming our democracy," Rep. Lofgren says.

Lofgren, responding to the president's counsel, says, "Some say no impeachment when there's an election coming, but without term limits when they wrote the Constitution, there was always an election coming."

"If impeachment in election years was not to be, our founders would have said so," she says.

PHOTO: President Trump's counsel Jay Sekulow speaks during closing arguments in the impeachment trial, Jan. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
President Trump's counsel Jay Sekulow speaks during closing arguments in the impeachment trial, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

2:07 p.m. Sekulow" Democrats have 'cheapened' impeachment

Next, one of the president's personal lawyers, Jay Sekulow, works to bring the defense’s argument together, contending that both articles of impeachment "fail to allege impeachable offenses" so both must be rejected.

He plays a series of video clip featuring Democrats foreshadowing an effort to remove Trump through impeachment since before the president’s inauguration.

"For three years, this push for impeachment came straight from the president's opponents and when it finally reached a crescendo, it put this body, the United States Senate, into a horrible position," Sekulow says.

"What the House Democrats have done to president himself, and to this body is outrageous," Sekulow says. "They have cheapened the awesome power of impeachment and unfortunately of course the country is not better for that. We urge this body to dispense with these partisan articles of impeachment for the sake of the nation, for the sake of the constitution."

"The real issue is policy disputes. Elections have consequences. We all know that and if you do not like the policies of a particular administration or a particular candidate, you're free and welcome to vote for another candidate. The answer is elections. Not impeachment," Sekulow says.

White House counsel Pat Cipollone then returns to the lectern and expresses "gratitude" to the Chief Justice, the Senate leaders and senators on both sides of the aisle, as well as his defense team.

Then he argued "these types of impeachment must end."

"At the end of the day we put our faith in the Senate," he said, predicting the senators will let the voters decide this fall whether Trump should stay in office. "At the end of the day, that is the only result."

"You’ll vindicate the rule of law," he says. "End the era of impeachment once and for all."

"Reject these articles of impeachment," Cipollone says. "I ask you on his behalf, on behalf of the American people, to reject these articles."

PHOTO: Deputy White House counsel Patrick Philbin speaks during closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
Deputy White House counsel Patrick Philbin speaks during closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

1:51 p.m. Philbin: Impeachment 'purely partisan'

White House deputy counsel Pat Philbin then attacks the House’s efforts to impeach the president, arguing Democrats abused their power in their impeachment effort.

"In very significant and important respects they didn't follow the law. From the outset, they began an impeachment inquiry here without a vote from the House and therefore without lawful authority, delegated to any committees to begin an impeachment inquiry against the President of the United States," Philbin says. "That was unprecedented in our history."

Philbin then says that a lack of a vote meant there was "no lawful authorization for the beginning of the process."

"The Speaker of the House does not have authority by holding a press conference to delegate the sole power of impeachment from the House to a committee and the result was 23 totally unauthorized and invalid subpoenas were issued at the beginning of this impeachment inquiry," Philbin says. "After that, the House violated every principle of due process and fundamental fairness in the way the hearings were conducted."

Philbin says that asserting the immunity of his senior advisers is a principle asserted by every president since Nixon.

"These are principles defending the separation of powers that presidents have asserted for decades. President Trump was defending the institutional interests of the office of the presidency in asserting the same principles here," he says.

He then criticized the House for jumping "straight to impeachment" rather than proceeding in the courts, contending that by moving to the "nuclear bomb" of its power, the House was akin to a parliamentary system where impeachment is effectively a vote of no confidence.

"This was a purely partisan political process," he says. "It was done to finish by Christmas on a political timetable and it's not something that this chamber should condone."

PHOTO: President Donald Trump's counsel Ken Starr speaks during closing arguments in the  impeachment trial, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
President Donald Trump's counsel Ken Starr speaks during closing arguments in the impeachment trial, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

1:10 p.m. Starr: Vote to convict would render 2016 election ''null and void'

As President Trump's defense lawyers take their turn wraps up their arguments for why the president should be acquitted, Ken Starr calls on senators to make their decision without any outside influence but only by looking at the case laid out by the House managers - a case he described as rushed and insufficient to vote to remove a president from office.

"Finally, does what is before this court, very energetically described by the able House managers, but fairly viewed, rise to a level of high crime or misdemeanor? One so grave and so serious to bring about the profound disruption of the Article II branch? The disruption of the government?" Starr asks.

"And to tell the American people and, yes, I will say, this is the way it will be read: your vote in the last election is hereby declared null and void. And by the way, we're not going to allow you the American people to sit in judgment on this president and his record in November. That's neither freedom nor is it justice," Starr argues.

He then turns to a sports analogy to argue the House’s case falls short of removal.

‘At the foundations of those authentic forms of justice is fundamental fairness. It's playing by the rules. It's why we don't allow deflated footballs or stealing signs from the field. Rules are rules. They are to be followed. So I submit that a key question to be asked as you begin your deliberations, were the rules here faithfully followed? If not, if that's your judgment, then with all due respect the prosecutors should not be rewarded," "You didn't follow the rules. You should have."

Starr concedes that the House has the power of impeachment, but "that doesn't mean that anything goes."

"It doesn't mean that the House cannot be called to account in the high court of impeachment for its actions in exercising that power," Starr says.

Starr asserts that the House rushed to judgment as it crafted the two articles of impeachment, contending it didn’t have time to follow the rules or generate bipartisan support for its case in Congress or throughout the country.

"A question to be asked: In the fast-track impeachment process in the House of Representatives, did the House majority persuade the American people? Not just partisans. Rather, did the House's case win over the overwhelming majority of consensus of the American people?" Starr asks. "The question fairly to be asked, ‘Will I cast my vote to convict and remove the president of the United States when not a single member of the president's party, the party of Lincoln, was persuaded at any time in the process?’"

--ABC News' John Parkinson

12:30 p.m. Trump tweets 'totally partisan Impeachment Hoax'

ABC News' Ben Gittleson reports from the White House, that President Trump, who has no public events today, is tweeting about the impeachment trial.

"I hope Republicans & the American people realize that the totally partisan Impeachment Hoax is exacty that, a Hoax. Read the Transcripts, listen to what the President & Foreign Minister of Ukraine said ("No Pressure"). Nothing will ever satisfy the Do Nothing, Radical Left Dems!" he says.

"Where’s the Whistleblower? Where’s the second Whistleblower? Where’s the Informer? Why did Corrupt politician Schiff MAKE UP my conversation with the Ukrainian President??? Why didn’t the House do its job? And sooo much more!"

12:26 p.m. Schiff: Implores senators to 'stand up to lawlessness and tyranny'

Lead House manager Adam Schiff takes over and immediately defends his staffers who he says "have been made to endure the most vicious, false attacks to the point where they feel their lives have been put at risk."

Schiff quotes from the late Rep. Elijah Cummings from the day the House announced its impeachment inquiry, saying, "’As elected representatives,’ he said, ‘of the American people, we speak not only for those who are here with us but of generations yet unborn. Our voices today are messages to a future we may never see. When the history books are written about this tumultuous era, I want them to show that I was among those in the House of Representatives who stood up to lawlessness and tyranny."

"We, the managers, are not here representing ourselves alone or even just the House," he continues. "Just as you are not here making the determination as to the president's guilt or innocence for yourselves alone. No, you and we represent the American people, the ones at home and at work who are hoping their country will remain what it has always believed it to be, a beacon of hope, of democracy and of inspiration to those striving around the world to create their own more perfect unions."

"For those who are standing up to lawlessness and to tyranny, Donald Trump has betrayed his oath to protect and defend the Constitution, but it's not too late for us to honor ours, to wield our power to defend our democracy," he says.

PHOTO: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks during closing arguments during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks during closing arguments during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

12:02 p.m. Jeffries: 'clear and present danger'

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announces the Senate will take a 30-minute break after Democrats finish the first part of their closing arguments, taking about an hour and reserving the rest for rebuttal.

PHOTO: House Manager Rep. Hakeem Jeffries delivers his closing argument during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
House manager Rep. Hakeem Jeffries delivers his closing argument during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

A few minutes earlier, House manager Hakeem Jeffries emphasizes what he says are the lasting consequences if the Senate votes to acquit the president, saying there is no dispute about the facts of the case.

"This is neither the first time that the president solicited foreign interference in his own election, nor is it the first time that the president tried to obstruct an investigation into his misconduct. But you will determine, you will determine, you will determine whether it will be his last," Jeffries says, adding "the president continues his wrongdoing unchecked and unashamed."

Jeffries says Trump is a "clear and present danger to our national security" and that condoning his behavior could damage U.S. relationships with other countries around the world.

11:51 a.m. Inside the chamber: 2020 candidates looking impatient

ABC News Senior Congressional Correspondent reports from inside the Senate chamber:

Inside the chamber, senators look like fidgety students on the last day of class.

There is a lot of activity, but not a lot of close attention being paid. Senators are shuffling papers, working on unrelated matters, reading or, in a few cases, napping.

The 2020 candidates look particularly antsy. Sen. Amy Klobuchar is moving around in her chair impatiently and constantly whispering to her seatmate, Sen Coons.

Sen. Bernie Sanders is yawning and looking around. Sen. Elizabeth Warren has her head down, writing notes on a pad in her lap, apparently working on something else.

GOP Sen. Susan Collins is still taking copious notes, perhaps working on her remarks for later in the week when she announces her position.

11:42 a.m. Democrat Doug Jones still 'undecided'

ABC News' Mariam Khan reports from Capitol Hill:

GOP Sen. Mike Braun of Indiana tells reporters he's anticipating a couple of his Democratic colleagues may vote with Republicans this Wednesday to acquit President Trump on at least one of the articles of impeachment.

"My guess would be maybe a couple, at least on the obstruction of Congress article, and maybe on both," Braun says.

Braun adds that his Democratic colleagues who are on the fence will have a difficult decision to make politically because they come from red states where Trump has previously won landslide victories. "I think they've got a real difficult decision because of how heavy Trump carries particular states," Braun says.

Democratic Sen. Doug Jones of Alabama, who briefly speaks to reporters on his way into the Capitol, says he is still "undecided" how he plans to vote on Wednesday.

"I'm getting there," he says. "I really do want to hear the arguments and some conversations from colleagues."

11:32 a.m. Democrats note Nixon, Clinton apologized

ABC News' Allison Pecorin reports from outside the Senate chamber:

As members filed into the chamber for closing arguments, Democrats said President Trump will further divide Congress if he fails to apologetically address his alleged wrongdoing in his State of the Union address tomorrow evening.

"I think the president's style and approach to this is going to make it more divisive," Sen. Chris Coons, D-Conn., said, "After the Nixon impeachment process, after the Clinton impeachment process, both of them made public apologies to the nation, to Congress and to the country for what they have put the country through. I do not expect that tomorrow night from President Trump."

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt, echoed that sentiment.

"I’ve never seen President Trump take responsibility for any of his misstatements or anything else he’s done wrong. He is not one who takes responsibility," Sen. Leahy said. "Was that too subtle?" he said.

Republican members were not keen on commenting on what they hope to hear from Trump’s speech.

"I learned early on this president, his instincts are pretty good in spite of the fact nobody agrees with them," Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma said. "So, I would not advise him either way."

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., ignored questions of whether the Senate ought to hear some sort of apology from the president.

PHOTO: House Manager Rep. Jason Crow delivers his closing argument during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
House Manager Rep. Jason Crow delivers his closing argument during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

11:21 a.m. House manger Crow says senators 'have a duty to perform'

Rep. Jason Crow starts off the House managers closing arguments in favor of convicting President Trump of abuse of power and obstruction of justice.

Crow argues the Senate's role in an impeachment trial is to think about the charges impartially and that they should not consider the arguments in defense of the president that while his behavior was inappropriate, it doesn't rise to the level that warrants removal from office.

"Today you have a duty to perform. With fidelity, not without a sense of surrounding dangers, but also not without hope. I submit to you on behalf of the house of representatives that your duty demands that you convict President Trump," Crow says.

ABC News' Trish Turner reports Crow invokes former Sen. Daniel Webster’s famous words in an 1850 floor speech, "The Seventh of March Address," when he put his faith in the Senate as a body of moderation.

The 3 ½ hour speech – ironically, though – is believed by some to have been his demise in abolition-minded New England – because Webster argued for the Compromise of 1850 which would keep slavery where it was already legal and not to worry about extending it to the West.

Crow raised the specter of the Republican party sticking with Richard Nixon, a popular conservative president, through Watergate – to its peril, saying, "Ultimately as Goldwater would tell Nixon, quote, there are only so many lies you can take and now there have been one too many."

PHOTO: House Manager Rep. Val Demings delivers closing argument during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
House manager Rep. Val Demings delivers closing argument during the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Feb. 3, 2020, at the Capitol.
ABC News

House manager Val Demings takes over to argue that the president's behavior represents an ongoing threat going into the 2020 election.

"As I stand here today delivering the House's closing argument, President Trump's constitutional crimes, his crimes against the American people and the nation, remain in progress," she says, before reviewing some of the details of the Democrats' case against Trump.

PHOTO: Chief Justice of the Supreme Court John Roberts during closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump at the Capitol, Feb. 3, 2020.
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court John Roberts during closing arguments in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump at the Capitol, Feb. 3, 2020.
ABC News

11:08 a.m. Trial resumes with Democrats arguing first, Roberts sounds sick

The Senate trial resumes with Chief Justice John Roberts presiding -- but with a very noticeably hoarse voice.

ABC's News' John Parkinson reports from Capitol Hill:

The House impeachment managers met again this morning, strategizing before their closing arguments in the Senate trial. I spotted Reps. Zoe Lofgren and Sylvia Garcia in the Capitol this morning, where a dozen U.S. Capitol Police officers are staged outside the meeting room.

A Democratic aide to one of the impeachment managers signaled part of the Democrats’ closing argument could emphasize Senate Republicans are party to "a cover-up" by voting against new witnesses. The aide feared that banner headlines on Thursday morning will read that Trump was exonerated.

Democrats are also dejected by the constitutional chaos and precedent that results from a failure to remove Trump from office, but the aide indicated GOP senators will now have to defend their record on the campaign trail, as Mitch McConnell works to defend his majority this fall.

With the Senate on a glide path to acquit President Trump at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, Democrats, nevertheless, are resigned to a disappointing outcome. While there is still a small chance the Senate could censure President Trump, the aide told me that any symbolic consolidation fails to reassure Democrats after Republicans voted to block new witnesses from being called in the upper chamber’s trial on Friday.

While Democrats continue to question Trump’s competence, banking on hope that the president screws up again in the future doesn’t provide any reassurance either, because Democrats don’t trust that anyone would reliably enforce the Constitution. After the special counsel’s Russia investigation failed to provide Democrats with enough ammunition to go after the president, they felt they had a slam dunk with the whistleblower’s account of Trump’s missteps on Ukraine – actions that even Republicans have called "inappropriate."

The bottom line: Democrats say they are astonished that Republicans are letting Trump "get away with it."

10:10 a.m. Van Hollen: 'Green light to abuse his power'

The Senate has given Trump a "green light to abuse his power," Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen said on CNN Monday morning. "The verdict on the U.S. Senate is "guilty -- of dereliction of duty," he said.

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