Congress didn’t solicit the advice of state attorneys general in Donald Trump’s impeachment trial, but 21 Republican state AGs decided to weigh in anyway, offering lawmakers some unsolicited guidance. The conservative Washington Times reported:
The Republican attorneys general of 21 states authored a scathing rebuke of the impeachment trial, urging senators to reject Democrats’ charges against President Trump.
In a 13-page letter to the U.S. Senate, the attorneys general assert House Democrats’ impeachment of Mr. Trump is nothing more than a political ploy that could destroy the Constitution’s separation of powers provision.
The entirety of the letter is online here, and some of it’s familiar. The GOP officials find the articles of impeachment unpersuasive; they believe the effort is at odds with “the Framers’ design”; they’re convinced Democrats are solely motivated by politics; and they believe impeachment should only be used in “exceedingly rare circumstances,” which do not include Trump’s illegal extortion scheme.
In a curious twist, they also somehow arrived at the idea that the president’s corrupt motives mean he’s being punished for “a political thought crime.” That’s a new one.
Adam Piper, executive director of the Republican Attorney General Association, added in a statement that Republicans “are committed to keeping America great,” which is apparently why 21 of the nation’s 26 GOP state AGs signed their name to the document.
After learning of the effort by way of Fox News coverage, the president seemed quite impressed with the effort, publishing a few tweets on the subject, one of which included a whole lot of all-caps words, suggesting Trump was quite worked up about the segments he saw. (Whether he read the entire multi-page, footnoted letter is unclear, though I think we can probably take an educated guess.)









