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US Senate Unlikely to Convict Trump Despite Republican Desire to Leave Him Behind, Analyst Opines

Jan 14, 2021

Washington (US), January 14: The US Senate is unlikely to convict President Donald Trump despite Republican hopes to put him in the past, although deadly violence at the hands of the Make America Great Again followers during President-elect Joe Biden's inauguration could change the situation, analysts told Sputnik.
Earlier on Wednesday, the US House voted 232-197 to impeach Trump again, this time on charges of "incitement of violence" against the US government. On January 6, thousands of pro-Trump protesters stormed Capitol Hill as Congress was certifying Biden's presidential election victory, resulting in 5 deaths and widespread damage and vandalism. The insurgent violence came after Trump called on supporters to prevent the election from being what he characterized as stolen.
The Senate impeachment trial will not conclude until after Biden takes over on January 20. It would take 67 votes (two-thirds of the total) to convict Trump, which would require at least 17 Republican senators to cross party lines.
On January 13, ten Republican members of the House voted alongside the Democratic block to impeach Trump a second time, while reports surfaced that Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell also favored impeachment. Meanwhile, Democrat and presumptive Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said that if Trump is convicted, the Senate will hold a vote to bar him from ever running for office again.
Financial analyst and political commentator Charles Ortel said Trump's enemies looked unlikely to reach a two-thirds Senate majority needed to convict, unless more rioting changed the equation.
If the Democrats and their Republican allies press ahead with impeachment after Biden takes office, however, it could backfire, only serving to strengthen US nationalism, Ortel opined.
On Tuesday, Trump told reporters that the speech he delivered on January 6 before his supporters stormed Capitol Hill was "totally appropriate." He said his second impeachment was a "continuation of the greatest witch hunt in the history of politics."
Source: Sputnik