Yesterday afternoon, a bipartisan majority in the U.S. House voted to impeach Donald Trump for the second time. The Republican was accused of “incitement of insurrection,” and 232 federal lawmakers agreed to hold to hold him accountable for his misconduct.
Attention now shifts to the U.S. Senate, which is tasked with holding a trial to weigh the outgoing incumbent’s guilt. Looking ahead, there are a handful of questions to consider:
When will the House send the impeachment article to the Senate?
There was some talk several days ago about holding the impeachment article — perhaps for months — in order to prevent disrupting Senate work in the early days of Joe Biden’s incoming administration. That option has been rejected, and the article will be sent immediately.
Will the Senate reconvene quickly for a trial?
Apparently not. Though there was some reporting this week that GOP leaders would return to work early to hold an impeachment trial — holding open the possibility of a pre-inaugural conviction — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R-Ky.) office confirmed yesterday that members would not return to work before Jan. 19, the day before Joe Biden’s swearing in.
Could McConnell reconvene sooner?
Yes, but Senate Republican leaders only seem to rush when there are Supreme Court vacancies to fill.
Given Republican opposition to impeachment, would a trial even matter?
Don’t be too quick to assume how senators would vote on this. The New York Times reported over the weekend, “While it seemed unlikely that 17 Senate Republicans would join Democrats for the two-thirds necessary for conviction, the anger at Mr. Trump was so palpable that [GOP] leaders said privately it was not out of the question.” A separate New York Times reporter added on Tuesday that as many as 20 Senate Republicans are “open” to convicting Trump.
Axios reported yesterday that Mitch McConnell himself “would be more likely than not to vote to convict Trump” — a move that would make it far easier for other GOP senators to do the same — and the Kentucky Republican confirmed in writing yesterday that he’s at least considering voting to convict Trump, a far cry from the position he took during Trump’s first impeachment.
Given that Trump will be out of office in six days, what difference would it make?
Under normal circumstances, a Senate trial leading to a conviction would remove an official from office. That obviously wouldn’t apply here: even if a two-thirds majority in the Senate agreed to convict Trump, it wouldn’t change the fact that the Republican, at that point, is a private citizen.








