President Donald Trump has been impeached by the House of Representatives. Now it’s up to the Senate to acquit or convict him. A conviction would result in Trump’s immediate removal from office and the ascension of Vice President Mike Pence to the presidency. An acquittal would result in a lackluster end to the impeachment process–an outcome promised; some might say preordained–by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).
That is, if the Senate actually gets its hands on the two successful articles of impeachment passed against the 45th president.
House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), however, was expressly noncommittal as to the ultimate fate of those somber indictments immediately after Wednesday’s historic vote.
The issue with sending those articles over? The GOP-dominated Senate’s refusal to call witnesses and the sense, all-but confirmed by McConnell and other Republican senators, that the fix was in.
“That would have been our intention,” Pelosi told an assemblage of reporters–referring to her constitutional prerogative to transmit the articles to the Senate, “but we’ll see what happens over there.”
The once-and-current Speaker elaborated Thursday morning:
I don’t think [the Founding Fathers] suspected that we could have a rogue president and a rogue leader in the Senate at the same time. The next thing for us will be when we see the process that is set forth in the Senate, then we’ll know the number of managers that we may have to go forward and who we will choose. That’s what I said last night, that’s what I’m saying now.
Republicans were quick to grumble and grouse.
“If House Dems refuse to send Articles of Impeachment to the Senate for trial it would be a breathtaking violation of the Constitution, an act of political cowardice, and fundamentally unfair to President [Donald Trump],” complained Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.).
But for each instance of the GOP’s upset feelings about Pelosi’s potential procedural brake-pumping, critics had more or less the same rejoinder: Chief U.S. Circuit Judge Merrick Garland.
“Just another gimmick and more changing of the rules,” whinged White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham.
Another riposte noted:
It wasn’t long before Merrick Garland’s name was trending on Twitter.
Other McConnell critics were simply content to point out the GOP’s apparent hypocrisy at being potentially steamrolled on a technicality.
“The senators who never gave Merrick Garland a vote and who’ve been cranking through the confirmation of unqualified judges can’t find enough smelling salts and fainting couches when Pelosi plays a little hardball on an impeachment trial,” boasted liberal Congressman Jim Himes (D-Connecticut).
Comedian Nick Pappas wasn’t joking when he posted the following:
“The House has much of an obligation to transmit the articles of impeachment as the Senate had an obligation to give Merrick Garland a hearing: none,” noted libertarian Cato scholar and Law Professor Josh Blackman.
CNN commentator Keith Boykin let the GOP’s storied dedication to constitutional norms and procedures speak for itself:
Even neoconservative Bill Kristol had some thoughts:
Pelosi’s possible stalling gambit also appeared to confound and confuse some GOP congressional staff.
“That’s actually not how the Constitution says this should work,” essayed Sen. Mike Lee‘s (R-Utah) press guru Conn Carroll.
The Constitution, of course, is actually silent on the matter. Several portions of the nation’s founding charter refer to impeachment but don’t offer any such mandatory rules to be followed in the event of such a confrontational situation as has developed here.
“Is that the same Constitution that says the Senate has to consider a president’s Supreme Court nominees?” asked Supreme Court reporter Lawrence Hurley.
Carroll easily took the bait.
“They did consider him and they rejected him,” he argued. “Nothing in the constitution calls for hearings or a vote. Look it up.”
“That was my point,” Hurley replied.
Carroll continued to protest:
Pelosi is saying more than that she can hold onto the articles… she is saying she has to know the senate rules before she can send them over. That’s not how impeachment is described in the constitution.
“But neither does the Constitution say the House is required to transmit the articles to the Senate, right?” Hurley pressed.
Carroll was eventually forced to concede the point.
“They can keep them sure,” he said. “But nothing in the constitution says the senate has to agree to trial procedure before the House can send them over which is what Pelosi is claiming.”
“Yep,” Hurley noted.
[image via SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images]