Analysis: 5 takeaways from Day 4 of Trump’s impeachment trial
1. Words matter. Except when they don’t: Trump’s lawyers tried to make two diametrically opposed arguments to dispel the idea that the former President was culpable for the January 6 Capitol riot. On the one hand, Trump attorney Michael van der Veen suggested that the President using the phrase “peaceful and patriotic” regarding the protests during his speech at the “Stop the Steal” rally was proof-positive that he had told them to not engage in a violent manner. On the other hand, Trump’s lawyers dismissed his repeated use of the words “fight” during that same speech by playing a long smash cut of Democratic politicians saying the word “fight.” The message was muddled: Do words — whether from the President or anyone else — matter, or don’t they? It seemed as though Trump’s lawyers were making the case that words mattered when it bolstered their argument that Trump didn’t incite a riot but not so much in other circumstances.
5. It’s all about the ‘hate’: The main reason that Democrats in the House impeached Trump, according to his lawyers, was not because of his action (and lack of action) on January 6 but rather because they simply hate him — and that hate has blinded them to due process and the rule of law. “Hate has no place in the American justice system and certainly no place in the Congress of the United States,” scolded Trump attorney Bruce Castor near the end of the defense team’s argument. As evidence he cited a video — I told you they made a lot of videos! — that cut together lots and lots of Democrats calling on Trump to be impeached over almost the entire duration of his presidency. Which happened! There was a group of House Democrats who tried to file impeachment motions long before we ever heard of Trump’s call with the Ukrainian President or his speech on January 6. But this argument is also a bit of a red herring. After all, this isn’t an either/or choice. You can hate Trump and still believe he didn’t incite a riot. And vice versa. Trump’s legal team was simply not willing to engage on the merits of what Trump said and did. And so they fell back on the everyone-is-so-partisan argument. It undoubtedly will resonate with many Republican senators looking for a justification to vote to acquit Trump. But that doesn’t make it true.