Chicago's NPR News Source

Senate Votes To Acquit President Trump, Ending Historic Impeachment Trial

Senators voted mostly along party lines this afternoon to acquit President Trump on two articles of impeachment. The White House called President Trump’s acquittal a “full vindication and exoneration.” But in a surprise decision, Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, joined Democrats to vote “guilty” on Article I.

This episode, White House correspondent Tamara Keith, congressional correspondent Susan Davis, and senior political editor and correspondent Ron Elving.

Connect:
Subscribe to the NPR Politics Podcast here.
Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.org.
Join the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.
Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.
Find and support your local public radio station.

Senators voted mostly along party lines this afternoon to acquit President Trump on two articles of impeachment. The White House called President Trump’s acquittal a “full vindication and exoneration.” But in a surprise decision, Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, joined Democrats to vote “guilty” on Article I.

This episode, White House correspondent Tamara Keith, congressional correspondent Susan Davis, and senior political editor and correspondent Ron Elving.

Connect:
Subscribe to the NPR Politics Podcast here.
Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.org.
Join the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.
Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.
Find and support your local public radio station.

The Latest
The endorsement, announced Friday in a video showing Harris accepting a phone call from the former first couple, comes as Harris builds momentum as the Democratic Party’s likely presidential nominee.
The department got a black eye over how it dealt with protests following the police killing of George Floyd in 2020.
The Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence typically releases its annual report in October but was so alarmed by the findings, it decided to publish the 2023 report months earlier.
The rally in West Allis, just outside Milwaukee, came a day after the vice president earned the support of enough delegates to secure the nomination, which is expected to come formally in early August via a virtual roll call.
Individual members of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. — whose headquarters are in Chicago — have begun mobilizing in masses to support their “soror” in the historic race for president.