Washington:Donald Trump's lawyers have told the Senate that he was a law-and-order president and his speech did not cause the January 6 riots at the Capitol.
"We have a complete lack of evidence for the article of impeachment presented by the House managers," Trump's lawyer Bruce Castor said on the Senate floor. The impeachment by the House, the case for which was laid out by the House managers in the Senate during the last two days, was political. "Their goal is to eliminate a political opponent, to substitute their judgment for the will of the voters," he said as he showed clips of various Democratic leaders in this regard.
Castor said that the critical issue in this case is the very narrow issue that is charged against the 45th president. "That issue is did the 45th president engage in incitement of -- they continue to say -- insurrection. Clearly there was no insurrection, he said. Insurrection is a term of art defined in the law. It involves taking over a country, a shadow government, taking the TV stations over and having some plan on what you're going to do when you finally take power. "Clearly this is not that," Castor said.
Citing reports from the FBI, the Department of Justice, and several former and present officials, he said that the January 6 riots were pre-planned.
"To answer the question of the House manager, does anybody believe that this would have occurred but for the speech from Donald Trump? I do. All of these facts make clear the January 6 speech did not cause the riots. The president did not cause the riots. He neither explicitly or implicitly encouraged the use of violence or lawless action, but in fact called for peaceful exercise of every American's first amendment rights to peaceably assemble and petition their government for address of grievances," Castor said.
Trump's lawyers presented their case for nearly four hours. After this the Senators, who act a juror for the impeachment trial, began the question-and-answer sessions from both the sides. The 100-member Senate would vote on the impeachment trial after the closing arguments are made by the two sides. To impeach Trump, the Senate needs 67 votes, which the political analysts said is a tall order for the Democrats. The Democrats have 50 members and they need the support of 17 of the Republican Senators.