BREAKING NEWS

Long Island native identified as person who set himself on fire outside Trump trial in Manhattan

Pelosi demands impeachment trial info before sending charges

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi insisted on Thursday that before she will send the Republican Senate the articles of impeachment, GOP leaders must provide more detail about how they will handle the expected trial.

News 12 Staff

Dec 20, 2019, 1:04 AM

Updated 1,582 days ago

Share:

(AP) - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi insisted on Thursday that before she will send the Republican Senate the articles of impeachment her Democratic chamber approved against President Donald Trump, GOP leaders must provide more detail about how they will handle the expected trial.
"We'd like to see a fair process, but we'll see what they have and will be ready for whatever it is," Pelosi said at the Capitol. "So far we haven't seen anything that looks fair to us," she had said Wednesday night, just after the House approved the two charges that could evict Trump from office if the Senate agrees.
The parties' Senate leaders, Mitch McConnell for the Republicans and Chuck Schumer for the Democrats, were meeting late Thursday on trial arrangements. The two men have a tense relationship, and McConnell holds a tactical edge if he can keep his 53-member Senate majority united.
Wednesday night's vote, almost entirely along party lines, made the president just the third in U.S. history to be impeached. The House impeached Trump on two charges - abusing his presidential power and obstructing Congress - stemming from his pressure on Ukraine to announce investigations of his political rival as Trump withheld U.S. aid.
Pelosi's unexpected procedural delay in taking the next step - apparently in search of leverage in locking in trial arrangements - got a sour response from Senate Majority Leader McConnell and from Trump himself.
McConnell said Democrats were "too afraid'' to send the charges to the Senate, where Trump would be expected to be acquitted by the Republican majority. Trump tweeted, "Now the Do Nothing Party want to Do Nothing with the Articles." He claimed that if the Democrats didn't transmit the charges, "they would lose by default," though there is no constitutional requirement to send them swiftly, or at all.
The trial has been expected to begin in January.
Along with her tough talk, Pelosi appeared upbeat the day after the impeachment votes.
"We've been hearing from people all over the country," she told reporters. "Seems like people have a spring in their step because the president was held accountable for his reckless behavior."
Pressed about next steps, Pelosi wouldn't say. Democrats are insisting on more witnesses, testimony and documents than McConnell appears willing to provide before they name the House "managers" who would prosecute Trump in the Senate.
"The next thing will be when we see the process that is set forth in the Senate," Pelosi said. "Then we'll know the number of managers we may have to go forward and who we would choose."
The Democratic speaker and the top Senate Democrat, Schumer of New York, met privately Thursday at the Capitol after Republican McConnell signaled in the strongest terms yet that his chamber intended to hold a swift trial and acquit the president of both charges.
McConnell denounced the "most unfair" House impeachment and reassured Trump and his supporters that "moments like this are why the United States Senate exists."
As for what the Senate would do, he said, "It could not be clearer which outcome would serve the stabilizing, institution-preserving, fever-breaking role for which the United States Senate was created and which outcome would betray it."
The Kentucky Republican described Trump's impeachment as "the most rushed, least thorough and most unfair impeachment inquiry in modern history."
Fighting back using McConnell's own words, Schumer said the Republican leader was plotting the "most rushed, least thorough and most unfair" impeachment trial in history by declining to agree to call witnesses including former Trump national security adviser John Bolton, who declined to testify before the House.
"McConnell claimed the impeachment was motivated by partisan rage," said Schumer. "This from the man who said proudly, 'I am not impartial.'"
"What hypocrisy."
Pelosi said that McConnell "says it's OK for the foreman of the jury to be in cahoots with the lawyers of the accused. That doesn't sound right to us."
Complicating any decision to delay are House Democrats' arguments in recent weeks that Trump's impeachment was needed "urgently," arguing his actions were a threat to democracy and the fairness of the upcoming 2020 election.


More from News 12
2:24
Long Island native ID'ed as person who set himself on fire outside Trump trial in Manhattan

Long Island native ID'ed as person who set himself on fire outside Trump trial in Manhattan

2:01
Cloudy start to the weekend before sun comes through

Cloudy start to the weekend before sun comes through

0:37
Officials: Wildlife rehabilitator took raccoons into her Merrick home without required rabies license

Officials: Wildlife rehabilitator took raccoons into her Merrick home without required rabies license

0:35
Calverton man pleads guilty to attempted murder charges related to opening fire at Bellport vigil

Calverton man pleads guilty to attempted murder charges related to opening fire at Bellport vigil

1:46
Alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer’s defense attorney demands information on other ‘top suspect’

Alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer’s defense attorney demands information on other ‘top suspect’

1:00
Baldwin students learn business skills with 'Little Lenox Bakery'

Baldwin students learn business skills with 'Little Lenox Bakery'

1:46
Gov. Hochul announces harsher penalties for illegal smoke shops

Gov. Hochul announces harsher penalties for illegal smoke shops

2:10
News 12 provides tips on the do's and don'ts of recycling

News 12 provides tips on the do's and don'ts of recycling

2:19
New retail theft prevention plan in state budget includes harsher charges, more patrols

New retail theft prevention plan in state budget includes harsher charges, more patrols

0:28
Muslim Student Association of Walt Whitman High School hosts Day of Unity conference

Muslim Student Association of Walt Whitman High School hosts Day of Unity conference

0:23
Suffolk County holds police promotion ceremony in Brentwood

Suffolk County holds police promotion ceremony in Brentwood

Is your mom awesome? Long Island tell us why your Mom Rocks!

Is your mom awesome? Long Island tell us why your Mom Rocks!

Show off your team spirit! Share your photos with News 12

Show off your team spirit! Share your photos with News 12

0:17
Police probe multivehicle crash on Southern State Parkway

Police probe multivehicle crash on Southern State Parkway

0:23
Police: 1 man faces charges for selling cannabis, illegal vape products at Huntington Station shop

Police: 1 man faces charges for selling cannabis, illegal vape products at Huntington Station shop

1:55
The Real Deal: How tipping trends have changed in the tri-state area

The Real Deal: How tipping trends have changed in the tri-state area

0:13
Officials: West Babylon home destroyed by fire

Officials: West Babylon home destroyed by fire

0:47
Cafe 217 provides students with autism chance for work experience at East Rockaway HS

Cafe 217 provides students with autism chance for work experience at East Rockaway HS

0:42
Community raises $12,000 for workers of Merrick bar closed due to fire

Community raises $12,000 for workers of Merrick bar closed due to fire

0:23
Police: Hempstead man stole parking meters near Jericho Turnpike and Roslyn Road

Police: Hempstead man stole parking meters near Jericho Turnpike and Roslyn Road