Donald Trump’s impeachment trial hasn’t even begun yet, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has made up his mind. So has Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). It’s against this backdrop that CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) yesterday, “[A]re you still keeping an open mind about this, or have you already decided you will acquit the president?”
Paul didn’t answer directly, though he predicted that every GOP senator will side with Trump — while unironically condemning the impeachment proceedings as “a very partisan exercise,” that the senator believes will ultimately “dumb down” the country.
It led to this striking exchange:
PAUL: The president … didn’t call up the president of Ukraine and say, “Investigate my rival.”
TAPPER: He said, “Investigate Joe Biden.”
PAUL: He said, “Investigate a certain person.” … He does not call up and say, “Investigate my rival.” He says, “Investigate a person.” […]
TAPPER: And Joe Biden is his rival.
We’ve seen plenty of bad arguments from Donald Trump’s allies, each of whom have been desperate to excuse his abuses and corruption, but this might actually be the least persuasive to date.
One of the core elements of the broader scandal is the simple fact that the American president pressured foreign countries to go after a domestic political rival, effectively taking steps to cheat ahead of his 2020 re-election campaign. For Rand Paul, the fact that Trump referred to a Democratic rival, but didn’t literally use the word “rival,” is somehow significant.
It’s not.
The Kentucky Republican went on to insist that Trump was genuinely concerned about Ukrainian corruption, which according to Paul, is why the White House withheld congressionally approved military aid. It’s difficult to say whether the senator believed his rhetoric, but it’s easy to conclude that he shouldn’t.









