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Live Reporting

Edited past Jessica Spud

All times stated are UK

  1. Former Olympic swimmer charged for Capitol riots

    Klete Keller competes in 2008

    Klete Keller, a 2-time Olympics golden medallist swimmer, has been charged in connexion with last calendar week'due south armed riots at the US Capitol.

    In the criminal complaint, filed today in Us District Court in Washington, Keller is charged with knowingly entering a restricted building, disorderly conduct in the Capitol building and impeding law enforcement.

    The champion swimmer was first identified in videos and photos of the riots posted on social media. The courtroom documents include screenshots of footage showing Keller wearing a jacket with what appears to be an Olympic patch.

    On Wednesday, the CEO of the United states Olympic and Paralympic Committee Sarah Hirshland issued a statement condemning the actions of those involved with the storming of the Capitol, proverb that those nowadays "attacked the very fabric" of American democracy.

  2. McConnell says focus on 'rubber inauguration' now

    Mitch McConnell

    Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has just released a statement on the timeline for the upcoming impeachment trial.

    He says even if the Senate convened this week, "no last verdict would be reached until later President Trump had left function".

    Recollect, Inauguration Day is 20 Jan. The Senate can yet captive Trump after his departure, though.

    "In calorie-free of this reality, I believe it will all-time serve our nation if Congress and the executive branch spend the next 7 days completely focused on facilitating a safe inauguration and an orderly transfer of ability to the incoming Biden Administration," McConnell said.

    "I am grateful to the offices and institutions within the Capitol that are working around the clock, alongside federal and local constabulary enforcement, to gear up for a safe and successful inauguration at the Capitol next Wed."

    Earlier, we learned McConnell has non made a final decision on how he will vote in the impeachment trial, saying he intends to mind to the arguments when they are presented.

  3. The moment Trump was impeached

    This is the moment Trump became the first president to be impeached twice.

    Congress voted 232 to 197 on the sole article of impeachment.

    Now, Trump faces trial in the senate.

    Video content

    Video caption: President Trump becomes first president to exist impeached twice
  4. The 10

    Cheney

    Paradigm explanation: Ms Cheney

    Ten Republicans voted with Democrats to impeach the president, making this vote the well-nigh bipartisan impeachment vote in U.s.a. history.

    They are:

    • Liz Cheney of Wyoming (the third highest-ranking Republican in the House)
    • Adam Kinzinger of Illinois (the only Republican that voted on a pecker calling for Vice-President Mike Pence to accept over as president yesterday)
    • John Katko of New York (the first House Republican to say he'd vote to impeach)
    • Anthony Gonzalez of Ohio
    • Tom Rice of Due south Carolina
    • Dan Newhouse of Washington State
    • Jaime Herrera Beutler of Washington State
    • Fred Upton of Michigan
    • David Valadao of Florida
    • Peter Meijer of Michigan

    Katko

    Image explanation: Mr Katko

    Mr Kinzinger

    Image caption: Mr Kinzinger
  5. Can an impeached president run for re-election?

    Yes, they can. Impeachment alone is non enough to bar a president from seeking role over again.

    Simply there's an exception.

    If Donald Trump is impeached in the House, and then convicted in a Senate trial, senators could so concord an boosted vote on whether to explicitly bar him from running again.

    This vote would require only a simple bulk in the bedchamber.

  6. What but happened?

    Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has officially confirmed Donald Trump'southward 2nd impeachment.

    Congress voted 232 to 197 on the sole article of impeachment, which charged Trump with "incitement of an insurrection" subsequently last week'south riots at the US Capitol. 10 Republicans broke ranks and voted to impeach.

    This vote marks an important alter from the president'due south commencement impeachment. In 2020, non a single House Republican voted for Trump's impeachment.

  7. Breaking President Donald Trump is impeached

    And with the blindside of the gavel, Donald Trump is the first president in US history to be impeached twice, following a vote in the House.

    Trump now faces trial in the Senate.

  8. A history-making moment

    Anthony Zurcher

    BBC North America reporter

    Donald Trump has made history one time once more, this time as the commencement president to be impeached twice.

    A year ago, the move was opposed in lockstep by the Republican Political party. This fourth dimension, a handful of conservatives backed the move. It is a reflection not only of the gravity of the moment, merely also the president's declining influence in the final days of his administration.

    Impeachment sets up a Senate trial for Trump that now appears destined to stretch into the early days of Joe Biden'due south presidency, creating yet another challenge for the incoming president. It also will stoke an ongoing debate amidst Republicans over the management their party takes in the days ahead.

    The party is on a path that splits in ii very different directions.

    On one side is connected allegiance to the president's brand of politics – one that created a new coalition of voters that delivered the White House and Congress in 2016, but lost both in 2020.

    On the other is an uncertain future – but i free from the president'due south unique brand of heat and rhetoric; unfiltered invective that even many Republicans now believe contributed to last week's Capitol riot.

  9. Breaking House has enough votes to impeach

    As it stands, Democrats have passed the threshold for enough votes to impeach President Donald Trump.

    Counting continues, however, only hither's the breakdown so far:

    • 221 Democratic yeas
    • ten Republican yeas (this is more than initially expected)
  10. What to expect from the impeachment vote

    Equally we reported earlier, lawmakers have begun voting on the impeachment resolution that charges President Trump with inciting violence against the government.

    This process should take around an hour in all.

    It'due south probable things volition play out in a largely partisan way, much similar the offset impeachment go around.

    But this time, we will see a handful of Republicans who are joining Democrats in rebuking the president for his actions.

    According to a C-Span tally, so far seven Republicans take reneged and voted yes to impeachment.

    Video content

    Video caption: Republican Congressman backs impeachment
  11. How did the debate play out?

    Rep Diana Harshbarger on the House steps of the Capitol on 4 January, 2021

    Paradigm caption: Rep Diana Harshbarger

    Republicans and Democrats today fabricated very unlike cases equally to why - or why not - Donald Trump should be impeached.

    Here's a look at what some of them said:

    Representative Doug LaMalfa, Republican of California

    "Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the second annual impeachment show extravaganza, brought to you lot by censors and left-fly media," LaMalfa said, calculation that this session is about Democrats' "unbridled hatred of this president".

    Representative Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, Democrat of Florida

    "To overturn the 2020 election Trump incited a vehement assault on Congress, a treasonous betrayal of our nation," she said. "He leaves us no pick merely to immediately remove him from office."

    Representative Diana Harshbarger, Republican of Tennessee

    "I've been hither all of one week and what I run across instead of lawmakers who are truth seekers I run into lawmakers who are power seekers," the freshman lawmaker said, calculation she would not vote to impeach Trump.

    Representative Terri Sewell, Democrat of Alabama.

    I will vote for impeachment, Sewell said. "I practise so with a heavy heart and a lasting and searing memory of being in this gallery, the people'southward Firm, fearing for my life, and why? Considering the president of the United states of america incited others to exist violent."

  12. What is the impeachment procedure?

    Results of the vote on whether to impeach President Trump for a 2nd time is coming shortly.

    If the vote goes the way of the Democrats, as is widely expected, a trial will brainstorm in the Senate in the coming days.

    graphic showing how impeachment works

  13. Breaking House begins vote on impeachment

    The debate session has concluded and Firm lawmakers are now voting on whether or not to impeach Trump for the 2d time in his presidency.

  14. Republican impeacher Liz Cheney responds to critics

    Cheney speaks with Democrat Jamie Raskin on Wednesday

    Prototype caption: Cheney speaks with Democrat Jamie Raskin on Wednesday

    Wyoming Republican Congresswoman Liz Cheney, the tertiary highest ranking Republican and chairwoman of the party conference, has striking back at critics from her party that have called for her to resign from senior leadership.

    The criticism followed her announcement she would vote to impeach Trump.

    "I'm not going anywhere. This is a vote of conscience," she told reporters.

    "Information technology's one where there are different views in our conference. But our nation is facing an unprecedented, since the Civil War, constitutional crunch."

    The decision by Cheney, a lifelong Republican whose male parent served as vice-president, signals the seriousness of the charges against Trump and a major alter in tone among some Republicans.

  15. In pictures: In and around the Capitol

    All eyes and ears are on the Firm chamber equally Republicans and Democrats debate the sole article of impeachment against the president. But here's what's happening outside the chamber.

    Anti-Trump protesters outside the Capitol

    Image caption: A handful of anti-Trump protesters join outside the Capitol

    Speaker Nancy Pelosi and staff walk through the Capitol

    Image caption: Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her staff on their fashion to the House floor

    Rep Brian Mast gives members of the National Guard a tour of the US Capitol

    Paradigm explanation: Rep Brian Mast gives members of the National Guard a tour of the US Capitol
  16. Breaking Mitch McConnell: 'I have not decided how to vote'

    Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell has just said the post-obit in a memo to colleagues.

    "While the press has been full of speculation, I have not made a final conclusion on how I volition vote and I intend to listen to the legal arguments when they are presented to the Senate," he said.

    The Senate volition simply stage a trial if the House votes before long to impeach. The trial probably won't happen before Mr Trump leaves office.

  17. At the Business firm: The politics - and patterns - of masks

    Samantha Granville

    BBC News, Capitol Hill

    Last night, Speaker Pelosi implemented fines for members who do not wear masks on the House flooring. Today, both Republicans and Democrats are using their masks to make political statements.

    Nancy Pelosi in a mask

    Newly elected Democrat Cori Bush wore a mask that reads "Black Lives Matter" while she chosen President Trump the "white supremacist in chief" on the Firm floor.

    Representative Marjorie Light-green wore a mask that says "Censored" equally she spoke freely from the Business firm floor confronting impeachment (her mask is a reference to conservative claims that social media companies are silencing their views).

    Marjorie Green in a 'Censored' mask

    Tom McClintock, a Republican from California, spoke in a mask that reads: "This is as useless every bit our governor." Ouch!

    Meanwhile, journalists like u.s. are mostly commenting on the nice patterns we see on each other'due south masks.

  18. Inside the chamber: Argue getting more than aroused

    Lebo Diseko

    BBC News, Capitol Hill

    They are currently debating and it'southward slightly more than rancorous than information technology started out.

    We are expecting that the vote will come up out "yes" to impeach. The Democrats practice have the numbers for that - just a simple majority is needed.

    Ordinarily in that location would exist an investigation phase merely we've skipped that.

    This is one of the criticisms Republicans have made - that they haven't had the usual opportunity to come across evidence and the normal standard investigation.

    But Democrats respond by saying that this is so important and this was and so egregious that it needs to happen.

    There is an historical precedent that says a president can exist impeached after he has left office.

    The i thing that Joe Biden would actually like to avoid is a state of affairs where he is unable to confirm his Chiffonier because the Senate is tied upwards with the impeachment hearings.

  19. Who are the Republican rebels so far?

    Dan Newhouse and Liz Cheney are among the Republicans backing impeachment

    Image explanation: Dan Newhouse and Liz Cheney are amongst the Republicans backing impeachment

    Six Republicans in the House of Representatives accept said they will cadet their party and vote to impeach Trump, and more may presently join them.

    • John Katko was the beginning Republican in the House to say he would vote to impeach. He serves a region in upstate New York that leans Democratic.
    • Liz Cheney is the daughter of onetime Vice-President Dick Cheney and represents Wyoming. She is the third-highest ranking Republican in the House and her decision to impeach Trump has provoked a backlash in her party.
    • Adam Kinzinger, a frequent Trump critic, represents a district south of Chicago in the state of Illinois. He was the only Republican that voted on a bill calling for Vice-President Mike Pence to have over equally president.
    • Fred Upton of Michigan said he would vote to impeach to send "a clear bulletin" near the importance of a peaceful transfer of power.
    • Jaime Herrera Beutler, from Washington, said he would impeach because Trump did nothing to stop the violence equally it was unfolding last week.
    • Dan Newhouse, besides from Washington, announced the same decision in a floor speech moments ago.
  20. The dilemma for Democrats

    Laura Trevelyan

    BBC World News America presenter

    Donald Trump ran as the law and order president and his last days in office take been consumed by just that.

    Outset came the mob trying to ransack the Capitol. And at present, Democrats in Congress and some Republicans, besides, are impeaching the president for inciting that insurrection.

    Trump is trying to backpedal and distance himself by condemning violence in all forms. Simply the damage has been washed. The interesting affair to scout is how many Republicans are going to vote to impeach him.

    In that location were some suggestions that Senate leader Mitch McConnell might allow an impeachment trial even before Joe Biden's inauguration on 20 Jan, simply today he close the door firmly on that.

    Whatsoever impeachment trial is going to exist kicked into Joe Biden'southward early on days equally president which poses a huge dilemma for Democrats because it will have attending away from confirming Joe Biden's appointees.