'A poignant moment': Trump lawyer hits Nancy Pelosi for impeachment signing ceremony from Senate floor during trial
'Pens!'
During the Senate's ongoing
impeachment trial of President Donald Trump on Monday, Trump attorney
Jay Sekulow criticized House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for handing
out souvenir pens after signing the House's articles of impeachment
last month, complete with
During his remarks from the floor of the Senate, Sekulow said
that he wanted to "contrast the solemn nature of these proceedings and
what has been laid out before us, from a both historical and
constitutional perspective ... with what took place in the House of
Representatives upon the signing of articles of impeachment."
The attorney then drew the chamber's attention to a video of the ceremony where Pelosi gave out souvenir signing pens after putting her mark on the House's two articles of impeachment earlier this month.
"Pens! Distributed to the impeachment managers," Sekulow said. "A celebratory moment: Think about that ... A poignant moment."
Sekulow's remarks echo criticism of the signing ceremony
and its now-infamous souvenir pens that appeared to undermine Pelosi's
longstanding talking point that impeachment was a serious and somber
process.
"They claim it's a somber, serious occasion they're heartbroken over ... and then they pass out impeachment-signing pens with special cases. Folks. You can't make it up," Rep. Mark Meadows (N.C.) tweeted at the time.
"Dems were giddy with excitement in Capitol hallway, asking, 'Did you get your pen?'" Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) wrote about the event. "The American people will hold House Dems accountable for making a mockery of their duty to the Constitution."
"We are used to seeing signing ceremonies, handing out
pens at moments of celebration, when a president is signing legislation,
when even sometimes...when the House sends over a piece of
legislation," CNN's Dana Bash said
of the signing ceremony. "It was unusual to see that kind of ceremony
and handing out the pens and smiling for a picture in this kind of
situation where the House Speaker has bent over backwards to say
publicly and privately this is somber, this is not a time for
celebration."
"Nothing says seriousness and sobriety like handing out souvenirs," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said days after the signing.
The attorney then drew the chamber's attention to a video of the ceremony where Pelosi gave out souvenir signing pens after putting her mark on the House's two articles of impeachment earlier this month.
"Pens! Distributed to the impeachment managers," Sekulow said. "A celebratory moment: Think about that ... A poignant moment."
"They claim it's a somber, serious occasion they're heartbroken over ... and then they pass out impeachment-signing pens with special cases. Folks. You can't make it up," Rep. Mark Meadows (N.C.) tweeted at the time.
"Dems were giddy with excitement in Capitol hallway, asking, 'Did you get your pen?'" Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) wrote about the event. "The American people will hold House Dems accountable for making a mockery of their duty to the Constitution."
"Nothing says seriousness and sobriety like handing out souvenirs," Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said days after the signing.
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