Impeachment Briefing: The Senate has it from here

The House of Representatives delivered its article of impeachment against Donald J. Trump.

By Maggie Astor

Welcome back to the Impeachment Briefing. I'm Maggie Astor, a politics reporter who will be taking over from Noah Weiland this time around.

What happened today

  • At about 7 p.m., the House of Representatives delivered its article of impeachment against Donald J. Trump to the Senate, charging him with incitement of insurrection. This is a ceremonial and highly choreographed procedure in which the House impeachment managers physically carry the document across the Capitol.
  • After walking the article through the halls that a mob ransacked just weeks ago, the lead impeachment manager — Representative Jamie Raskin, Democrat of Maryland — read it on the Senate floor. The article is four pages long, and reading it took about five minutes.
  • The article states that when Mr. Trump addressed his supporters on Jan. 6, he "willfully made statements that, in context, encouraged — and foreseeably resulted in — lawless action at the Capitol."
  • It also notes his previous efforts to subvert the election results and says his actions "threatened the integrity of the democratic system, interfered with the peaceful transition of power, and imperiled a coequal branch of government."
  • Officials confirmed that Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont, would preside over the trial in his role as president pro tempore of the Senate. Normally, the chief justice of the United States presides over such trials, but the fact that Mr. Trump is no longer in office creates some wiggle room.

The last two weeks

If you're finding it hard to believe it has been only 12 days since the House voted to impeach Mr. Trump, we can't blame you. A lot has happened since then.

The biggest thing that happened, of course, is that President Biden was inaugurated, lessening the practical implications of the impeachment trial. But the trial is still highly significant — both as a public signal of how much Republicans are willing to tolerate from a leader of their party, and because if the Senate were to convict Mr. Trump, it could vote to bar him from running again.

Many Republican senators have argued that Mr. Trump's departure makes impeachment a pointlessly divisive exercise, and if he is ultimately acquitted, it may be for that reason: The timing allows Republicans to take issue with procedure, rather than defending Mr. Trump's actions.

Senators Chuck Schumer of New York and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Democratic and Republican leaders, reached an agreement last week to delay the trial for two weeks, to allow time both for Mr. Trump's lawyers to prepare their defense and for the Senate to work on confirming more of Mr. Biden's cabinet nominees.

What happens next

Impeachment is now officially in the Senate's hands, but the trial won't start until Feb. 9. We talked to Nicholas Fandos, one of The Times's congressional reporters, about what's in store.

What happens in the two weeks before the trial starts?

On Tuesday, the Senate will convene as a court of impeachment for the first time so that senators can take an oath to administer "impartial justice" and issue a summons to Mr. Trump to answer the charge against him. But after that, the trial will essentially be put on pause until Feb. 9 to allow the prosecution and defense to draw up and submit a series of written briefs laying out their arguments. In the meantime, the Senate will go on working on confirmation of nominees to President Biden's cabinet.

Once the trial starts, can we expect it to run similarly to the last impeachment trial?

We expect the substantive part of the trial to look roughly similar to the one last year, just on fast-forward. Each side will get to present its case, senators will have time to question them, and the chamber will vote on whether to call for additional witness testimony. That should all take place in just three or four days.

If senators do want to hear from witnesses, that could increase the length of the trial by weeks. But if not, there could be a vote to convict or acquit Mr. Trump by the end of the week of Feb. 8.

Are there open questions that you hope will be answered in the next two weeks?

The two biggest questions right now are where Republicans will land on Mr. Trump's guilt and whether they will want to hear from additional witnesses. Conceivably, any senators could announce their positions on those issues in the next two weeks, but my guess is that they will bite their tongue, bide their time and wait until February to make those calls.

What else we're reading

  • Two weeks before the impeachment trial begins, the Senate's divisions are already hardening. Senator Mitt Romney of Utah, who cast the only Republican vote to convict Mr. Trump the first time he was impeached, seems prepared to do so again, while many other Republicans are bashing the decision to hold a trial at all.
  • Representative Eric Swalwell of California, one of the House impeachment managers, appeared on MSNBC to argue for the constitutionality of holding a Senate trial against someone who is no longer president. He cited the 1876 impeachment trial of William Belknap, which was held after he had resigned as war secretary.
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