Trump Impeachment Lawyers Bail After He Demands They Go Along With Fraud Falsehoods

US President Donald Trump speaks following a section of the border wall in Alamo, Texas, on January 12, 2021. - Trump on January 13, 2021, became the first US president to be impeached for a second time, when a bipar... US President Donald Trump speaks following a section of the border wall in Alamo, Texas, on January 12, 2021. - Trump on January 13, 2021, became the first US president to be impeached for a second time, when a bipartisan majority in the House of Representatives voted to charge him with inciting last week's attack on the US Capitol. One week before Trump is to leave office, a total of 232 lawmakers, including 10 Republicans who broke with the president, voted to impeach the defiant Republican leader for high crimes and misdemeanors on a single charge of "incitement of insurrection." (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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With almost a week left before his second impeachment trial, former President Trump’s five impeachment defense lawyers have reportedly departed over disagreements on Trump’s legal strategy. CNN first reported the news on Saturday night.

According to CNN, Butch Bowers and Deborah Barbier, who were set to lead Trump’s impeachment defense team, made the mutual decision to withdraw. Bowers had assembled Trump’s legal team as its expected lead attorney.

CNN also reported that North Carolina attorney Josh Howard as well as South Carolina attorneys Johnny Gasser and Greg Harris are no longer part of Trump’s  impeachment defense team.

The departure of attorneys who were expected to defend Trump during his second impeachment trial comes after the former president has struggled to form his defense team amid staying hellbent on his baseless claims of election fraud.

Trump is now left empty-handed as legal briefs for his second impeachment trial are due next week and the trial itself is set to kick off days later.

According to CNN, a person familiar with the departures said that Trump pushed the attorneys to argue his bogus claims of election fraud rather than the legality of convicting a former president. Trump reportedly was not receptive to his attorneys’ on how to proceed.

CNN noted that the attorneys had not received any advance fees nor did they sign a letter of intent.

Former Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller slammed Democrats over their vote to impeach the former president for “incitement of insurrection” (the House voted to impeach Trump while he was still in office) in a defensive statement to CNN.

Miller reiterated Republicans’ disputed legal argument that an impeachment trial for Trump is unconstitutional now that he’s left office — a stance that was formalized when only five Republican senators voted against Sen. Rand Paul’s (R-KY) motion to force a vote on the constitutionality of Trump’s second impeachment trial. Paul’s motion failed to pass in a 55-45 vote.

Miller said that a “final decision” on Trump’s defense team will be made “shortly.”

“The Democrats’ efforts to impeach a president who has already left office is totally unconstitutional and so bad for our country. In fact, 45 Senators have already voted that it is unconstitutional,” Miller told CNN. “We have done much work, but have not made a final decision on our legal team, which will be made shortly.”

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  1. Pretty much

  2. That’s the way the cookie crumbles.

  3. Avatar for pb pb says:

    Aside from the fact that trump is crazy and he would be the worst client ever, trump’s lawyers were probably just looking for an excuse to withdraw b/c they knew full well that trump would never pay them for their services.

  4. smart move from a lawyers point of view.
    Don’t attach yourselves to a failed case and go down in history as another victim of ETTD.
    You were never going to get paid anyway.
    Let him testify in his own defense at trial. Give him all the time he wants and full access to all media until he collapses.
    Then all will be well once again.

  5. In December 1851, facing the end of his term, French President Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte executed a successful coup d’état. Having previously seized control of the army, Bonaparte dissolved the Legislative National Assembly and extended his term of office by ten years. One year later he declared the Second French Empire and anointed himself Napoleon III. He remained emperor until the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870. Karl Marx opens his contemporaneous account and commentary about the 1851 coup d’état:

    "Hegel remarks somewhere that all great, world-historical facts and personages occur, as it were, twice. He has forgotten to add: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce.”

    ― Karl Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte

    Welcome to your failed coup d’état and second impeachment farce.

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