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Trump: Congress Should Expunge Impeachment, ‘Terrible’ to Rip up SOTU Speech

Trump Declares Victory in Speech After Acquittal

President Donald Trump said the failed impeachment efforts against him were a continuation of attempts that started the moment he declared his bid for the presidency in 2015. Trump, 73, was speaking at the White House a day after he was acquitted by the Senate on both charges—obstruction of Congress and abuse of office—laid out by the House of Representatives. “It started from the day we came down the elevator … and it never really stopped. We’ve been going through this now for over three years,” he said. “It was evil, it was corrupt, it was dirty cops. It was leakers, it was liars. It should never happen to another president again, ever.” The moment was not a news conference or a speech, Trump said. “It’s a celebration,” he said.…

Trump: Congress Should Expunge Impeachment, ‘Terrible’ to Rip up SOTU Speech

President Donald Trump said that Congress should expunge impeachment from his record after he was acquitted Wednesday in the Senate trial, while telling reporters that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) move to rip up his State of the Union speech on Tuesday was “disrespectful to the country.”

“I thought it was a terrible thing,” Trump told reporters on Friday. “It’s illegal what she did. She broke the law.”

Legal experts, however, have said that ripping up the speech wasn’t illegal because it was a copy and not an official record.

The president said Friday that he didn’t know Pelosi ripped the copy of his speech until members of Congress spoke to him about it as he left the chamber.

“I didn’t know that she did it until I was walking out,” he said, adding that some of “the congressmen and women said, ‘Can you believe what she just did?’”

Trump: Congress Should Expunge Impeachment, ‘Terrible’ to Rip up SOTU Speech House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) rips up the speech of President Donald Trump after his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber of the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Feb. 4, 2020. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

Pelosi said at a press conference that she ripped the speech to call awareness to what she said were falsehoods contained within.

“I tore up a manifesto of mistruths,” she told reporters on Thursday. “It was necessary to get the attention of the American people to say, ‘This is not true. And this is how it affects you.’”

“It was, in my view, a manifesto of mistruths, of falsehoods, blatantly, really dangerous to the well-being of the American people if they believed in what he said,” she added. “So again, we do not want the chamber of the House of Representatives to be used as a backdrop of his reality shows with unreality in his presentation.”

Both Pelosi and Trump issued publicly televised statements on Thursday and attacked one another, suggesting that—along with Pelosi’s Tuesday night move to tear up the speech—tensions between the White House and congressional Democrats will not abate any time soon.

Expunge Impeachment?

Outside the White House on Friday, Trump was asked about expunging impeachment, to which he replied, “They should, because it was a hoax. That’s a very good question.” He added, “Should they expunge the impeachment in the House? They should because it was a hoax. It was a total political hoax.”

That idea was floated by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) earlier this week after the president’s acquittal, saying he would move to expunge impeachment from Trump’s record if the GOP retook the majority in the House and he became speaker.

“I don’t think it should stay on the books,” he stated.

On Wednesday, the Senate voted to acquit Trump of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. Democrats have said Trump abused his power by allegedly withholding aid to Ukraine in exchange for investigations during a July 25 phone call where the president asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to “look into” Joe and Hunter Biden, a Ukrainian gas company previously under investigation over corruption allegations, and alleged election interference.

Amid the inquiry and trial, Trump and other White House officials have denied Democrats’ allegations.

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Pelosi Says Trump’s State of the Union Speech Was a ‘Manifesto of Mistruths’

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Feb. 6 provided a detailed rationale for why she tore up a copy of President Donald Trump’s prepared State of the Union remarks, alleging that the president lied to the American people on a number of major topics. “It was, in my view, a manifesto of mistruths, of falsehoods, blatantly, really dangerous to the well-being of the American people if they believed in what he said,” Pelosi told reporters during her weekly press conference. “So again, we do not want the chamber of the House of Representatives to be used as a backdrop of his reality shows with unreality in his presentation.” Trump delivered an optimistic State of the Union address on Feb. 4. The president at times contrasted the success of his administration…