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As it happenedended

Trump news: President gloats over impeachment acquittal as White House trails ominous threat to make opponents ‘pay’

Vindictive White House 'victory' speech follows rally-like State of the Union as Democratic challengers prepare for New Hampshire

Chris Riotta,Joe Sommerlad,Alex Woodward
Thursday 06 February 2020 12:35 EST
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Mitt Romney to break from Republicans and vote to convict Trump on impeachment

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Surrounded by his cheering allies at the White House, Donald Trump celebrated his acquittal in his impeachment trial after after appearing at the National Prayer Breakfast brandishing aloft newspaper front pages announcing Wednesday's landmark decision.

The president also used the occasion to attack House speaker Nancy Pelosi and Utah senator Mitt Romney, the lone Republican to vote "guilty" with Democrats after excoriating the president in the blistering Senate speech.

Wednesday's Senate vote on the two articles laid against him by the House of Representatives – abuse of power and obstruction of Congress – was split largely along party lines with only Mr Romney daring to break ranks, denouncing the president’s “appalling abuse of public trust” in an emotional speech from the floor that earned him the ire of a vengeful Republican Party, with members calling for his expulsion and likening him to Judas Iscariot and Benedict Arnold.

At her weekly conference, Ms Pelosi criticised Mr Trump's rally-like State of the Union address as a "the compilation of falsehoods" and said she now-famously ripped up a copy of his speech to "clearly [indicate] to the American people that this is not the truth" as the president's allies applauded his remarks.

In preparation for his remarks, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham ominously told Fox News that Mr Trump planned to talk about “how horribly he was treated and that maybe people should pay for that”, suggesting a threatening remainder of his term in office following his opponents' failure to remove him. The White House also issued anti-Romney talking points attacking him as a self-serving politician with a history of flip-flopping.

Mr Trump called the Russia investigations against him as "bulls***" and attacked former FBI Director James Comey, among several targets in his address (Ms Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, Robert Mueller, the FBI's "top scum" and "crookedest and most corrupt", among them).

The remarks went quickly off the rails, from reenacting the shooting of Congressman Steve Scalise to praising Congressman Jim Jordan's looks, briefly addressed the leaked Access Hollywood tape in which he gloats about assaulting women, and leading standing ovations for his legal defence team and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Meanwhile, the results of the Iowa Caucus, the first state to host an election in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary race, are nearly complete, with 97 per cent of the vote totals showing a razor-thin delegate win for Pete Buttiegieg and a majority vote victory for Bernie Sanders, who collected more votes than his opponent.

Despite the vote totals being incomplete, Democratic National Committee chair Tom Perez has pressured Iowa's party officials to review the results, following significant delays and inconsistencies after an app failure forced officials to review the vote totals manually.

The candidates are now campaigning in New Hampshire ahead of that state's primary on 11 February. The president will hold a rally in the state on 10 February.

Follow our coverage as it happened:

Donald Trump just called the Russia investigation "bulls***" during a shocking moment in this speech. He has spent the majority of his time behind the podium deriding the probes that have plagued his presidency, saying: "We thought after the election it would stop. But it just started."

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:30

Donald Trump tells Senate Majority Leader he "did a fantastic job" in the US Senate's impeachment trial. 

"This guy is great, and I appreciate it," the president said, before noting how nearly 200 federal judges have been appointed since he was sworn into the Oval Office. 

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:35

Here's the moment in which Donald Trump calls the Russia investigations "bulls***" -

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:39

A lot of false statements are being made in this acquittal speech by Donald Trump - including, for example, the claims of former FBI Director James Comey being an admitted-leaker:

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:43

Donald Trump says to the people of Utah: "I'm sorry about Mitt Romney", slamming the Utah Republican senator who split ranks with the party and voted in support of his impeachment over an abuse of power.

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:44

Here's more on the moment Donald Trump called the investigations against him "bulls***" in a speech marking his acquittal in the US Senate's impeachment trial: 

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:46

Trump says "boy, my kids could make a fortune" while discussing Hunter Biden's involvement on the board of a Ukrainian energy firm as his father worked in the White House. As a reminder, the president's children continue to profit from multiple private businesses.

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:50

Donald Trump has spent a lot of time during this speech thanking Republican leaders for supporting his acquittal in the US Senate's impeachment trial against him. But the president has also attacked a host of Democrats - 

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:52

This speech has gone completely off the rails, as presumed. Donald Trump says Republican Jim Jordan is “obviously very proud of his body” before pointing out that “there’s something going on with his ears”. 

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 17:59

Meanwhile, as Donald Trump delivers a speech about his acquittal in the US Senate's impeachment trial, Democratic leaders are calling for an official recanvassing of the Iowa caucus results:

Chris Riotta6 February 2020 18:03

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