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House Impeachment Managers Read Articles On Senate Floor

The Senate is taking some of its first steps to prepare for next week's impeachment trial of President Trump, just the third such trial in Senate history.

Like many congressional activities, the process begins with much pomp and circumstance and procedure and process. But little of substance will be achieved until the case for impeachment is presented next week.

First though, there are some housekeeping measures. The seven House managers named by Speaker Nancy Pelosion Wednesday were escorted to the well of the Senate chamber, where the lead manager, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., formally read or "exhibited" the resolution appointing them and the two articles of impeachment approved by the House last month.

Watch the presentation.

At 2 p.m., the Senate will move to take up the articles. Chief Justice John Roberts, having crossed First Street from the Supreme Court building over to the Capitol, will be escorted into the chamber by the Senate president pro tempore, the most senior member of the majority, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa.

Watch the proceedings live here.

Grassley will swear in Roberts to be the presiding officer during the trial, and Roberts will then swear in the 100 senators to act as jurors.

Senate rules say the president is then summoned and given a chance to respond. President Trump will be primarily represented by two attorneys, White House counsel Pat Cipollone and Jay Sekulow, a private attorney who represented Trump in the Russia investigation.

But that is expected to be the extent of the "action" this week. Senators will likely head home for the Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend, and the essence of the trial will get under way next Tuesday.

Senators may chafe at some of the conditions they'll have to deal with once that happens. They are expected to be seated at their desks and will have to refrain from talking to one another during the arguments.

They'll need to rise when Chief Justice Roberts enters and exits the chamber, and should votes occur, they'll have to stand then, too.

Perhaps most difficult of all, senators will be separated from their cellphones while in the chamber and must check them in their cloakrooms.
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National Public Radio is based in Washington D.C.