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Ill. governor's impeachment trial opens
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-01-27 10:13 The impeachment trial opened with the presiding judge, Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Fitzgerald, telling senators: "This is a solemn and serious business we're about to engage in."
Fitzgerald ordered the proceedings to continue as if Blagojevich had entered a plea of not guilty. No other Illinois governor has ever been impeached, let alone convicted in a Senate trial. It would take a two-thirds majority — or 40 of the 59 senators — to remove Blagojevich. The Senate also could bar him from ever again holding office in Illinois. Democratic Lt. Gov. Patrick Quinn would replace him. The outcome of his impeachment trial has no legal impact on the criminal case against Blagojevich. No trial date has been set on those charges. Practically the entire political establishment has lined up against him. The last of two House votes on impeachment was 117-1, with his sister-in-law the only dissenter. In his TV appearances, and in interviews over the past few days, the governor portrayed himself as the victim of a miscarriage of justice. He has likened himself to the hero of a Frank Capra movie and a Wild West cowboy in the hands of a lynch mob. He said he took solace from thinking of Nelson Mandela, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Gandhi. Blagojevich complained, among other things, that the trial is unfair because he was unable to call White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel as a witness. Emanuel has said that Blagojevich did nothing wrong when the two talked about Obama's Senate seat.
"I'm talking to Americans to let them know what's happening in the land of Lincoln," Blagojevich said during his media blitz. "If they can do this to a sitting governor, deny me to bring witnesses in to prove my innocence ... they can do it to you." Neither the prosecution nor the defense is allowed to summon any witnesses whose testimony might interfere with federal prosecutors' criminal case against Blagojevich. But Blagojevich has not asked to call any witnesses at all, and said he does not plan to participate in any way. "The suggestion that this is somehow unfair to the governor is the most self-serving, ludicrous statement I have ever heard in my life," state Sen. Matt Murphy, a Republican, said on "Good Morning America" during Blagojevich's appearance. "It couldn't be fairer for this guy." The impeachment case against Blagojevich also includes allegations he defied the Legislature, circumvented hiring laws and traded state contracts for campaign contributions. In one of the most surprising interviews of the day, Blagojevich said he briefly considered naming Oprah Winfrey to the Senate. Winfrey said she would have turned him down. "I'm pretty amused by the whole thing," Winfrey told "The Gayle King Show" on Sirius XM Radio. "I think I could be senator, too. I'm just not interested."
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