WASHINGTON – Minnesota's U.S. senators, witnesses to the Jan. 6 siege on the Capitol and now jurors in the Senate impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump for inciting it, said Wednesday that they have not given up hope he'll be convicted.
"I think anyone who saw what happened knows what this president did," Klobuchar said in an interview shortly before the trial's second day got underway.
Klobuchar and Tina Smith, Minnesota's other senator, sided with fellow Democrats and six Republicans a day earlier in voting that the trial should proceed. But the 44 Republican votes against suggest the Senate is likely to fall short of the two-thirds majority needed for conviction.
"I'm not going to concede that right now," Klobuchar said. "It doesn't mean that that's the way everyone's going to vote. … You've got to make a decision on the facts, now that the Senate has found the trial to be constitutional. And [Senate Minority Leader] Mitch McConnell has said as such. So let's see what they do."
Smith said she directly faces the Republican side of the chamber, from her vantage point on the Senate floor. She said she's been encouraged to see most paying close attention and taking notes.
"That tells me they're learning something," said Smith.
Spotted from the press gallery, Klobuchar could be seen listening intently and jotting notes herself. On Wednesday, senators sat with eyes glued to video monitors, as the House members prosecuting the case scrolled through dozens of video clips of Trump using language in the months leading up to the election that previewed his defiant remarks to supporters at the White House rally held shortly before the attack.
Trump frequently used terms like "greatest rigged election in history" six months before he actually lost, the evidence showed.