The administration is
reportedly basing its argument on an opinion piece in Bloomberg that
one former federal prosecutor called "ridiculous."
Sunday, December 22, 2019
On December 18, minutes after
the U.S. House of Representatives voted to impeach President Donald Trump two
articles of abuse of power and obstruction of justice, CNN's Brian Stelter
took to Twitter to announce "there
is no way to deny: Trump has been impeached."
Reporting Saturday from CBS
News, however, indicates that
the White House may be about to do just that.
The administration is
reportedly looking at claiming Trump was not impeached because House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi is holding back on sending the articles to the Senate until the
upper chamber's Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) lays out the rules for
how Trump's trial will be run, technically the president has not been
impeached.
CBS News broke the story
Saturday evening, citing two sources in the administration.
According to CBS News,
the White House believes that a Thursday opinion piece written for Bloomberg
News by Harvard Law Professor Noah Feldman is a solid basis for
denying the president's impeachment.
Feldman argues that
Pelosi holding the articles could mean that technically the president has not
been impeached.
"If the articles are not
transmitted, Trump could legitimately say that he wasn't truly impeached at
all," writes Feldman. "That's because 'impeachment' under the
Constitution means the House sending its approved articles of to the Senate,
with House managers standing up in the Senate and saying the president is
impeached."
That argument works for the
administration, which has been trying to find a way to reject the outcome since
the December 18 vote:
The sources told CBS News that
the White House views Pelosi's delay as "a Christmas gift." They plan
to use the delay to argue that the Democrats have so little faith in their own
case for impeachment, they are too scared to trigger a trial they know they
will lose. The two sources also say that the president, while "angry"
about what he views as an unfair process, is actually in a "very good
mood," and feels confident he can win the messaging war via Twitter while
lawmakers are back home for the holidays.
Fox News host Laura
Ingraham on Friday said that
the House holding back, for now, from sending the articles to the Senate meant
that the nation was watching "America's first fake impeachment."
"One could make a fairly
decent argument that the president wasn't really even impeached," said
Ingraham, citing Feldman's opinion piece.
Denying the legitimacy of the
vote's outcome is not new to the president and his allies.
Trump rejected the December 18
vote the very next day in comments to reporters at the White House.
"I don't feel like I'm
being impeached," the president said. "It's a hoax."
Former federal prosecutor Elie
Honig on CNN Saturday called Feldman's
argument "ridiculous" and the product of what happens when "law
professors get a little too clever."
"The Constitution is
clear here," said Honig. "The Constitution gives the House the sole
power to impeach and the Senate to try impeachments. There's nothing about a
formal transmission. This is something that is made up."
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