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HORIST: When is a trial NOT a trial?

<p>The answer to that question is everything you need to know about what is going on in Washington these days&period;  The answer&comma; of course&comma; is when it is an impeachment&period;  The Founders used the word &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;trial” in the broadest sense&period;  They did not mean for impeachment to be a judicial process or the Senate trial to be like a courtroom trial&period;  They could have had it decided by the Supreme Court instead of the Senate&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Everyone seems to concede that Impeachment is a POLITICAL process – not a judicial process&period;  But once they lay that foundation&comma; they proceed to act as if it IS a judicial process&period;  They describe an impeachment by the House as comparable to an indictment by a grand jury&period;  Nothing could be further from the Truth&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Grand juries – as bad as they might be – are at least a secret process in which a prosecutor’s case is presented to 23 jurors who are randomly selected and vetted for their impartiality&period;  Leaking of grand jury testimony is a serious crime for which people have been prosecuted&period;  Leaking secret impeachment testimony is a matter of common practice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Grand juries do not cleave along preconceived political loyalties&period;  In addition&comma; grand juries are restrained by the rule-of-law and rules-of-evidence&period; Jurors are commissioned to determine the presence of a potential crime according to statutes – not pop-opinion&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>One only need look to the process that led to the impeachment of President Trump to understand that it takes place outside the limitations and rights of our judicial system&period; The judicial system protects the process from undue outside influences&period;  The impeachment process relies on them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In impeachment&comma; Crimes can be alleged that have no basis in statutory law&period;  Unlike grand jurors&comma; those voting on impeachment are deeply planted in partisanship&period;  That is obvious by the outcome of the vote&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Trump was impeached for several reasons&period;  First&comma; because he is of a different political party than the one that controls the House at this time&period;  No president has ever been impeached by a House controlled by his own party&period;  That should tell us something&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Trump was also impeached because it has been a well-established long-time obsession of the Democrats&period;  It is partly based on his more conservative policies – especially those judicial appointments – and his pugnacious personality and – shall we say – libertine character&period;  None of that is impeachable by the standards of the Founders and the subsequent examples of impeachment&period;  Although not a judicial process&comma; impeachment has&comma; in the past&comma; required a statutory crime&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The crimes alleged against Trump are not actual crimes&period;  They would never stand up in a court-of-law&period;  Both Articles of Impeachment – Abuse of Power and Obstructing Congress – are matters of opinion that are usually best settled by the Supreme Court&period;  In this case&comma; House Democrats decided to circumvent the proper process to move forward to a starkly political impeachment&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>President Jerry Ford once said that an impeachable offense is anything that a majority of the House of Representatives says it is&period;  While many scholars protest that to be far too cynical&comma; he is correct – and we have seen that being played out for weeks … months&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Now that the issue moves to the Senate for the obligatory &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;trial&comma;” all those pundits and talking heads are describing the process as if it were a real judicial trial&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The most obvious difference is that the jury is nothing like a courtroom jury&period;  Again&comma; it is the makeup of the jury&period;  In the Senate phase of the impeachment process&comma; the decision-makers are again people with deeply confirmed partisan viewpoints – members of the two major opposing parties&period;  It does not require a crystal ball to predict that the future vote will be largely along partisan lines&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It has been pointed out that the senator-jurors take an oath to be objective&period;  That is broadly interpreted since virtually every senator has a political bias – and a vested interest in the outcome&period;  Some senators say they will remain objective as a doff of the cap to that oath&period;  In reality&comma; we know – and they know – exactly how they are going to vote in the overwhelming majority of the individual cases&period;  We know that Trump will not be removed from office – as no other President has been by Senate trial&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As much as the opposition has tried time and time again to find incriminating evidence to justify removal from office – or to weaken Trump’s re-election candidacy&comma; they have failed&period;  No amount of media bias has done the job&period;  The dubious investigation based on a phony bias and FBI violations has not done the job&period; The strategically engineered investigation by Special Counsel Robert Mueller did not only NOT do the job&comma; it totally backfired&period;  The scandalous Steele Dossier only revealed the Clinton campaign’s collaboration with Russian operatives&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For the better part of three years&comma; Democrats have promised that some sort of smoking gun was just about to be revealed – if only there was more time and more investigation&period;  So&comma; Democrats jumped off the slippery slope of impeachment – not because they had the evidence – but in hope of finding or concocting it&period;  For the first time in American history&comma; we had an impeachment process in search of presidential misdeeds&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Now we have the trial in the Senate&period;  It is clear that the House will send over a pretty weak and incomplete case&period;  While Democrats and their media pals keep wondering why Republican senators cannot join in their partisan crusade&comma; it is even more curious that no Democrat senators can objectively recognize the shallowness&comma; callousness and weakness of the impeachment voted by the House&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While Democrats will not admit it&comma; they well understand that their colleagues in the House labored mightily and brought forth a gnat&period;  It is the reason they want to continue to investigate in the hope of finding that elusive smoking gun&period;  They want the Senate to call witnesses in the hope that their failed effort can be revived&period;  They are not ready for trial but rather wish to continue the impeachment process&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Sorry Nancy&comma; that is not how it works&period;  The case made by the Democrats in their Articles of Impeachment is the only thing that the Senate need consider&period;  The Senate stands in judgment – not as a continuation of the House process&period;  Put in poker terms&comma; Pelosi and the Democrats are not satisfied with the hand they were dealt – or dealt themselves – and now want a couple of extra cards in hope of improving their hand&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>From the very onset of the impeachment inquiry&comma; there has been no doubt that Trump would be impeached by the majority of Democrats in the House &&num;8212&semi; although they did suffer four defections while the GOP suffered none&period;  There seems to be no doubt that the Senate will refuse to remove Trump from office&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; what in God’s name was all this crap about&period;  Oh yeah … politics&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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