CBS "Face the Nation" - Transcript: Interview with Sen. Dick Durbin

Interview

Date: Dec. 15, 2019
Location: Washington, DC

BREAK IN TRANSCRIPT

We turn now to the number-two Democrat in the Senate, Richard Durbin. He joins us this morning from Chicago. Good morning to you, Senator.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN (D-Illinois/Democratic Whip/@SenatorDurbin): Good morning, Margaret.

MARGARET BRENNAN: You know about twenty years ago when Bill Clinton was being impeached, you had said at the time you wanted it dismissed. Now the tables are turned. We're set most likely for a trial in the Senate. But since the votes aren't in Democrats' favor, why not just dismiss it?

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: Well, I can tell you that it isn't just the President who's on trial in an impeachment proceeding. The Senate is on trial. And we have a constitutional responsibility. I hear people like Senator McConnell talking about the fact that he sat down with the folks at the White House. He's already made his decision even before he's taken his oath to promise impartial justice. He sees no need for us to spend a lot of time. My friend Senator Lindsey Graham refers to the whole thing as a crock. You know what it boils down to is we may interfere with some tee times here, but we ought to really stand up for the demeanor, the history, and the traditions of the Senate in terms of doing this in the proper way.

MARGARET BRENNAN: So you don't want a short trial?

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: No. I think what we ought to do is, as we did twenty years ago, let's have Senator McConnell sit down with Senator Schumer--Trent Lott sat down twenty years ago and start this proceeding in the proper bipartisan way. That hasn't happened yet. I don't know what Senator McConnell is waiting for. And, Margaret, let me tell you what happened twenty years ago. They decided, Trent Lott, that the entire Senate, all hundred members, would go to the old Senate gallery and sit down together. We realized at that moment we were embarking on a moment that would be captured in history, this impeachment trial of Bill Clinton. And you had interesting alliances form. Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts--

MARGARET BRENNAN: Yeah.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: --comes together with Phil Gramm of Texas to talk about the procedures during impeachment. The Senate finally realized we were on trial, too, and we had to comport ourselves in a dignified way.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Why do you think it's so different this time? Is it-- is it McConnell's leadership? Is it President Trump?

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: Well, Senator McConnell proved to us when the vacancy of Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court that he would ignore logic and common sense and even Senate tradition to take a political position. And he announced recently he would switch his position a hundred and eighty degrees if the same thing happened to President Trump. So the starting point is not good. It takes four Republican senators who care enough for the Senate, for all of our colleagues to say, let's do this properly. Regardless of the outcome, whatever it may be, at the end of the day, let's be able to turn around and say, as Alexander Hamilton promised, the Senate--

MARGARET BRENNAN: Mm-Hm.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: --is the right place for this trial.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, we-- we know, are-- the votes don't appear to be there to remove the President. But when it comes to the process of this, Democrats do get a say if it does take, as Lindsey Graham has said, fifty-one votes to approve a witness. Do you plan to call them and who do you want to hear from?

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: Well, I can tell you where I'm standing, if it is a true trial there needs to be evidence. And we have had an effort by the administration to deny to the House of Representatives any evidence, documents, witnesses. At one point, Chairman Nadler of the House Judiciary invited the President or his attorneys to come sit at the dais and ask questions to follow the proceeding. They turned him down. It appears to me there are no witnesses the President would want to call to exonerate himself. Maybe such a witness doesn't exist. I don't know. But the bottom line is if we are going to have an actual trial, we should consider evidence. And that's why I think Senator Schumer and Senator McConnell need to sit down and have an orderly, respectable process in the Senate.

MARGARET BRENNAN: And you have a list of witnesses set to go?

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: There are a lot of potential witnesses, that's for sure. But in terms of those that we'd actually choose--

MARGARET BRENNAN: Mm-Hm.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: --and whether they'd be called or deposed, those are things we can work out. Once we have a spirit that this is a constitutional responsibility, that really is a reflection on who we are as United States Senators.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, less than half of the country thinks that the President should be impeached. How do you make a more persuasive case to the public in the Senate than your House colleagues did?

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: I could just tell you, we-- we present the evidence and let the American people follow this trial in the Senate. You know, it isn't a question of political popularity as far as I am concerned.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Mm-Hm.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: For the longest time, many of us said which Republican is going to defy the wishes of their political base and come forward and do the right thing for the country?

MARGARET BRENNAN: Yeah.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: Same thing applies to Democrats. Will we ignore our political base and look at our Constitution? That's what should guide us.

MARGARET BRENNAN: I want to ask you about a hearing you were part of this week, the contentious hearing over secret surveillance, the FISA process, as it is called. Inspector General laid out significant errors by the FBI. And, specifically, I want to ask you about what an FBI lawyer did when he retroactively changed an e-mail that was presented as part of evidence regarding a Trump campaign associate, Carter Page. Jim Comey is on Fox this morning and he said Carter was treated unfairly. Does the U.S. government owe Carter Page an apology?

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: Well, I can certainly tell you, based on what we saw, they do. And here's the bottom line. Many of us have been looking at this FISA, the secret FISA court for years, saying this isn't the first and won't be the last time that the FBI misrepresents evidence before this court and proceeds. We have tried to reform the proceedings. Senator Lee, Republican Senator Leahy, Democrat, myself, and others have been pushing for FISA reform. We couldn't get the Republicans to join us in that effort. Maybe now they will. This should be a bipartisan effort to clean up the FISA court. What happened in this situation was inexcusable. But remember what the inspector general said is the bottom line. Opening this investigation--

MARGARET BRENNAN: Yeah.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: --was warranted and not political.

MARGARET BRENNAN: But he also said there were seventeen significant errors that he uncovered--

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: No question about it.

MARGARET BRENNAN: --alone. I'm wondering if you have confidence in the current director, Chris Wray, to be able to fix some of these problems. Jim Comey, again this morning, was saying there are maybe systematic problems regarding surveillance within the FBI.

SENATOR RICHARD DURBIN: I do have confidence in Mister Wray. I voted for him. I support him. I looked at his background. And I think he can do this job and do it well. But to have the President in his corner would be very helpful. The President's very critical of the FBI and the intelligence agencies. If we're going to bring about real reform, the White House has to be in on it.

MARGARET BRENNAN: All right. Senator Durbin, appreciate you joining us today.

BREAK IN TRANSCRIPT


Source
arrow_upward