When Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) unveiled his blueprint for Donald Trump’s impeachment trial last night, it landed with a thud.
Under the GOP leader’s vision, for example, both sides would present their cases over just two days — opening the door to late-night proceedings that few Americans would see. McConnell’s plan also did not automatically admit evidence collected as part of the House’s impeachment inquiry as part of the Senate proceedings.
Senate Democrats howled, pointing to the Republican leadership’s approach as evidence of a rigged trial, and a sharp departure from the rules during the Clinton impeachment trial in 1999. This afternoon, to the surprise of many, McConnell shifted his posture.
The last-minute changes — which were written by hand on the resolution, with other lines crossed out — were revealed on Tuesday as the organizing resolution for President Donald Trump’s Senate trial was being read into the record on the Senate floor. The new version gives both side 24 hours to make their case over three days, instead of the two initially proposed by McConnell on Monday…. The change means the trial days, which start at 1 p.m. ET, will likely now conclude around 9 pm. […]
McConnell also tweaked another controversial provision that could have barred all the evidence against Trump gathered by the House Democrats’ inquiry from being entered into the Senate record.
To be sure, these changes in direction do not entirely resolve the partisan conflict. The revised resolution still offers no guarantees on witness testimony and no assurances that senators will be able to consider new evidence.









