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Trump team’s opening arguments: the key takeaways

<span>Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images</span>
Photograph: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Defense lawyers at Donald Trump’s Senate impeachment trial concluded their opening arguments on Tuesday. Here are six key takeaways:

The ‘policy dispute’ defense

The president’s defense argued on Monday that Trump’s conduct toward Ukraine did not stem from a desire to smear the former vice-president Joe Biden, but from Trump’s personal concerns about corruption in Ukraine and burden-sharing with Europe.

Trump’s lawyers sought to cast the furore over his Ukraine conduct as a policy dispute. “To have a removal of a president based on a policy dispute? That’s not what the framers intended,” said Trump’s personal lawyer Jay Sekulow.

Gliding past Bolton

But on Tuesday the defense went further, to argue that even if everything reportedly charged in a forthcoming book by the former national security adviser John Bolton is true – that Trump conditioned military aid for Ukraine on the receipt by him of personal political favors – that would still not be impeachable.

“Even if everything in there was true, it constitutionally doesn’t rise to that level” of an impeachable offense, said Sekulow.

Republican Mike Braun of Indiana made the case off the Senate floor:

Can I get a witness?

Probably not. Sekulow argued that reports about Bolton’s book were “inadmissible” as hearsay, but the defense team simultaneously argued that no witnesses should be called.

That’s not how the public feels about it, however, according to opinion polls conducted in the past week, including one released by Quinnipiac on Tuesday:

Time to spare. Lots of it

Trump’s defense was spread across three days, but the first and third days were short ones – an intro on Saturday and an outro on Tuesday. All told, the defense used about 10 of its 24 hours allotted for opening arguments – less than half the time House managers used to present evidence against Trump.

Questions are next

The majority leader, Mitch McConnell, said the Senate would convene at 1pm Wednesday to begin a question period, which could last for a maximum of 16 hours spread over two days. Senators will submit written questions to be read by the supreme court’s chief justice, John Roberts, who encouraged the counsels on Tuesday to limit their responses to five minutes apiece.

Big day on Friday

The Senate was on track to hold at least one major vote on Friday, on the question of whether to vote on individual witnesses. If the Senate decides against witnesses, then the big vote – whether to convict or acquit the president – could follow soon after. If Trump has his way, the impeachment process could be concluded by the weekend, well in advance of his State of the Union address scheduled on Tuesday 4 February.