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		Trump's trial is over but the final verdict is not yet in
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		 [February 06, 2020] 
		By Susan Cornwell, Steve Holland, Richard Cowan and James 
		Oliphant 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In Hollywood, it is 
		called a false ending – where the story appears to be heading to a close 
		but is not yet over.
 
 President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial ended on Wednesday with a 
		conclusion that was unsurprising – his acquittal. But in reality the end 
		of the story will play out in November, when American voters go to the 
		polls.
 
 That is when Democrats will finally learn whether their gamble to 
		impeach a president for the third time in U.S. history paid any 
		electoral dividends in winning over undecided voters. Opinion polls 
		during the impeachment proceedings suggested little political harm to 
		Trump - opinions among Republicans and Democrats were largely entrenched 
		from the outset.
 
 November is also when Republican Party lawmakers in the U.S. Congress, 
		especially those in districts and states that are a toss-up, may learn 
		the political costs of erecting a human wall to block efforts to remove 
		Trump from the Oval Office.
 
 Trump's lawyers argued that with elections nine months away it should be 
		left to the voters to render the final verdict on whether Trump abused 
		his office by pressuring Ukraine to investigate a Democratic political 
		rival, Joe Biden.
 
		
		 
		
 The impact of the trial on the election is far from clear. By the time 
		Election Day arrives, Trump's impeachment, and the partisan battle 
		around it, may be a distant memory for many voters more focused on 
		bread-and-butter issues.
 
 Still, the impeachment of one of the most polarizing presidents in 
		modern U.S. history has shaken up the election race by energizing both 
		parties' bases.
 
 "I think it's done one good thing for Democrats. It has awakened some of 
		the activists to the very real possibility that Trump will win a second 
		term," said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s 
		Center for Politics.
 
 Trump has raised millions of dollars for his re-election campaign off 
		the impeachment trial, netting $46 million in the fourth quarter of 2019 
		in the most lucrative haul of his re-election campaign. The money, 
		raised during the impeachment inquiry, was mostly from supporters angry 
		at Democratic efforts to oust him from office, Republican officials 
		said.
 
 Democrats, who have to worry about their fragile controlling majority in 
		the House, saw massive fundraising spikes too on both Democratic 
		presidential candidates and in congressional races.
 
 Republicans and Democrats are likely to attack their opponents' 
		impeachment votes in the Senate and the House of Representatives in 
		media ads during the election campaign, some political analysts said. In 
		some places that has already begun.
 
 Representative Joe Cunningham, a Democrat who flipped a South Carolina 
		district in 2018 that had been Republican for decades, launched 
		advertisements in his district this month to emphasize his legislative 
		achievements to counter a wave of anti-impeachment attack ads by 
		Republicans.
 
 Cunningham's approach echoes that of many Democrats, especially in 
		vulnerable districts: Say little about impeachment and focus on 
		accomplishments. "I just want to make sure the record is clear on 
		exactly what we are doing, and where our focus is," the congressman told 
		Reuters.
 
 SWAYING VOTERS
 
 When House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the top Democrat in 
		Congress, announced the impeachment inquiry in September, many Democrats 
		were hopeful of winning over a greater share of public opinion. Pelosi 
		cited polls showing increased support among Americans for an inquiry 
		into Trump's conduct.
 
 [to top of second column]
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			President Donald Trump delivers his State of the Union address to a 
			joint session of the U.S. Congress in the House Chamber of the U.S. 
			Capitol in Washington, U.S. February 4, 2020. REUTERS/Leah 
			Millis/POOL 
            
 
            Over the course of months, public opinion edged towards support for 
			impeachment but the hoped-for groundswell failed to materialize 
			despite televised congressional hearings in which current and former 
			government officials detailed a pressure campaign to push Ukraine to 
			carry out the probes Trump sought.
 Pelosi's decision to launch the inquiry did quell a growing clamor 
			within her party, especially from the left, for Trump to be 
			impeached, an effort she had been resisting for months amid worries 
			it could backfire on Democrats electorally.
 
 Her decision gave the party a united public stance against what 
			Democrats viewed as Trump’s outrageous behavior, a rallying cry they 
			can use against Republicans through November.
 
 Democratic lawmakers say the decision by Senate Republicans not to 
			allow witnesses at Trump's trial and to acquit him could come back 
			to haunt them in November.
 
 “A lot of people are going to look at the Republican Party and say, 
			`They were more about protecting the president than they were about 
			finding out what really happened,'" California Representative Gil 
			Cisneros, one of the last House Democrats to back an impeachment 
			inquiry, said in an interview.
 
 Trump too can now boast he has survived both an inquiry by Special 
			Counsel Robert Mueller into Russian election meddling in 2016 to 
			help him get elected and now impeachment, efforts that he has said 
			are driven by "Deep State" elements within the U.S. government 
			opposed to his presidency.
 
 Reuters/Ipsos polling shows that the impeachment proceedings have 
			not had an impact on Trump’s popularity among Americans.
 
 The latest poll, conducted on Feb. 3-4, showed 42% of American 
			adults approved of his performance, while 54% disapproved. That is 
			nearly the same as it was when the House launched its impeachment 
			inquiry in September, when his approval stood at 43% and his 
			disapproval at 53%.
 
            
			 
			"The ultimate deciders are the independent voters who seem to have 
			broken at least even, if not slightly in favor of the president on 
			the issue of fairness," of the process, said Republican Senator Tim 
			Scott of South Carolina, where Trump scored a solid victory in 2016.
 Representative Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, whose concerns over 
			impeachment led him to abandon the Democratic Party for the 
			Republicans, said of Trump: “I don’t think anybody’s invulnerable, 
			and I don’t think you should ever say that.”
 
 But he added: “I certainly think it’s benefited him.”
 
 (Reporting by James Oliphant, Susan Cornwell, Richard Cowan, Steve 
			Holland, Chris Kahn and David Morgan; Editing by Ross Colvin and 
			Howard Goller)
 
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