A new poll released Saturday shows a majority of U.S. adults believe former President Trump
Fifty-three percent of U.S. adults polled said Trump should not be allowed to run for public office again, while 50 percent said they would vote to convict Trump in the Senate impeachment trial if they were given the vote, a poll by Ipsos conducted for Reuters found.
A poll from YouGov and The Economist released Friday also found that 53 percent of people believe Trump should not be allowed to run for office again.
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Many are arguing Trump should not be allowed to run for office again due to his actions and words leading up to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6 that left five people dead.
By Mike Lillis - 02/13/21 04:36 PM EST
Liberals on and off Capitol Hill are up in arms after Democratic impeachment managers abandoned their effort to compel new witness testimony in the trial accusing former President Trump
The progressive critics contend that Democratic prosecutors, by accepting a deal to exclude those witnesses and wrap up the trial, missed a unique opportunity to highlight Trump s involvement in the assault, particularly his refusal to defuse the violence after it had begun.
They aren t mincing words.
ADVERTISEMENT This is retreat. White flag. Malpractice. Completely unstrategic. They just closed the door on others who may have stepped out, as @HerreraBeutler urged last night, Adam Green, who heads the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, said on Twitter, referring to Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler
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The announcement set off something of a scramble as the two sides mulled how to move forward. Trump s team threatened to call hundreds of witnesses, something they did not have the authority to do but reflected their willingness to drag out the trial for weeks if Democrats insisted on having additional testimony.
Instead, the Senate entered a statement Herrera Beutler released on Friday night into the trial record. The agreement allowed the trial to proceed to closing arguments and a final vote on Trump s guilt on Saturday without hearing from witnesses.
Some Biden allies expressed relief that the Senate would not hear from witnesses, arguing an extended trial would hinder efforts to confirm the president s nominees and work on his legislative agenda.
McConnell s decision, confirmed to The Hill by a GOP senator, comes hours before the Senate is expected to take a final vote on whether to convict Trump of high crimes and misdemeanors over an article accusing him of inciting insurrection during the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
McConnell has criticized Trump s role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, including saying the former president provoked the mob. He disclosed to reporters last month that he hadn t spoken to Trump, with whom he aligned himself closely for years, since Dec. 15.
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But he also kept his caucus guessing on how he would ultimately vote, saying that he wanted to listen to the arguments from both House impeachment managers and Trump s legal team.
House impeachment managers, former President Trump's legal team and top senators struck a deal on Saturday that will let the Senate bypass calling witnesses.