Senate 2/9 trial impeachment case Trump acquittal chances are high

The former U.S. President Donald Trump was impeached by the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives on the 13th of this month, after the House passed a motion of impeachment on the grounds of encouraging people to storm Congress on the 6th and alleged “sedition”, Senate Majority (Democratic) Leader Schumer announced on the 22nd that the case is waiting to be formally sent to the House of Representatives on the 25th, and the Senate is currently scheduled to start the trial on February 9th. CNN reported that the majority of Republican senators have been deflated and still support Trump’s case, his “chances of guilt” are “almost zero”.

Schumer added that Americans look forward to forgetting “this terrible chapter” of the Six Day Riot, but “healing and unity depend on truth and accountability,” but the Senate will prioritize the confirmation of Biden‘s cabinet list and the Wuhan pneumonia 1.9 trillion dollar bailout bill that concerns millions of people. The nine trillion dollar bailout bill.

AFP pointed out that postponing the Senate trial schedule to next month is actually a consensus reached by Schumer and Senate Minority Leader McConnell. The company has been supporting Trump for four years, McConnell has broken with Trump after the Congress attack, but still managed to delay the Senate trial until February on the grounds that Trump needs Time to find a defense lawyer. The company’s main goal is to provide the best possible service to its customers, and to provide the best possible service to its customers.

The threshold of conviction must be at least 17 people down

As far as CNN knows, Schumer and McConnell have agreed that the two sides have two weeks to exchange views before the trial, and the final debate is due next month on the 9th, when one hundred senators will vote in the chamber for the charges proposed by the House, the threshold for conviction is two-thirds, that is, at least seventeen Republicans need to reverse. The Senate found Trump “guilty”, although there is no longer a substantive need to legally dismiss him, but will give opponents a follow-up vote to ban him from running for president again in the future: according to the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, officials who have taken an oath to uphold the U.S. Constitution while in office but have committed rebellion, rebellion or collaborated with the enemy are not allowed to serve as presidential electees.

The anti-Trump CNN also reported that after privately contacting more than 12 Republican senators, they learned that the chances of Trump being “guilty” should be low, and most were inclined to vote for him as “not guilty”. Senator Wicker, a Mississippi Republican, said the chances of Trump’s guilt were “almost zero.