1
U(D54G1D)y+"!]![!$!" Gail Collins PAGE A23 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23 tions that undergirded the charges, that he sought to pres- sure Ukraine to smear his political rivals. But in a sign of the widening partisan divide testing the coun- try and its institutions, the verdict did not promise finality, which members of both parties con- ceded would come only after the November election. The president himself did not directly address his acquittal, but shortly afterward, he announced on Twitter that he would make a public statement on Thursday at the White House about what he called “our Country’s VICTORY on the Impeachment Hoax.” He then tweeted an attack ad against WASHINGTON — After five months of hearings, investiga- tions and revelations about Presi- dent Trump’s dealings with Ukraine, a divided United States Senate acquitted him on Wednes- day of charges that he abused his power and obstructed Congress to aid his own re-election, bringing an acrimonious impeachment trial to its expected end. In a pair of votes whose out- come was never in doubt, the Sen- ate fell well short of the two-thirds margin that would have been needed to remove the 45th presi- dent. The verdicts came down — after three weeks of debate — al- most entirely along party lines, with every Democrat voting “guilty” on both charges and Re- publicans uniformly voting “not guilty” on the obstruction of Con- gress charge. Only one Republican, Senator Mitt Romney of Utah, broke with his party to judge Mr. Trump guilty of abuse of power. It was the third impeachment trial of a president and the third acquittal in American history, and it ended the way it began: with Re- publicans and Democrats at odds. They disagreed over Mr. Trump’s conduct and his fitness for office, even as some members of his own party conceded the basic allega- SPLIT SENATE CLEARS TRUMP ON EACH COUNT IN FINALE OF A BITTER IMPEACHMENT BATTLE ‘Country’s Victory,’ President Says — Democrats Call Trial a Cover-Up By NICHOLAS FANDOS President Trump was acquitted on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress in nearly party-line votes on Wednesday. DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Article I: Abuse of Power If all 100 senators are present, 67 votes are needed to convict. Article II: Obstruction of Congress Yes Total 47 53 Dem. 47 0 Rep. 0 53 No Yes Total 48 52 Dem. 47 0 Rep. 1 52 No Continued on Page A11 DES MOINES — Maybe it was the threat of bad weather. Maybe it was a seating assignment deba- cle. Maybe it was a struggling campaign organization that still hadn’t found its footing. But as Joseph R. Biden Jr. spoke at a major Iowa Democratic Party dinner in November, one thing was clear: His support appeared tepid compared with the vocal cheering sections of his biggest ri- vals. The reception angered Mr. Biden and his top aides — and it left little doubt about his standing, three months before the nominat- ing process in the Democratic presidential race would begin: The former vice president was in deep trouble in Iowa. Two days after the dinner, Mr. Biden ripped into his campaign chairman, Steve Ricchetti, ac- cording to a person familiar with the conversation. And at the Bi- den headquarters in Philadelphia, senior officials sternly told staff members they needed to step up their performance. The dinner’s damaging optics marked the beginning of a flurry of changes: Trusted aides were deployed to Iowa sooner than an- ticipated. Mr. Biden rescheduled time with donors to make space for a bus tour in Iowa. Former Gov. Tom Vilsack of Iowa and his wife, Christie Vilsack, major play- ers in Iowa Democratic politics, Late Start and Missteps Hobbled Biden in Iowa This article is by Katie Glueck, Jonathan Martin and Thomas Kap- lan. “We took a gut punch in Iowa,” Joseph R. Biden Jr. said. JORDAN GALE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A16 WASHINGTON — Senator Mitt Romney of Utah never became president, but he earned a new distinction on Wednesday: He will be remembered as the first sena- tor in American history to vote to remove a president of his own party from office. Mr. Romney, the 2012 Republi- can nominee for president, said he expected swift and extreme re- crimination from his party for his solitary act of defiance. He was not incorrect. Donald Trump Jr., the presi- dent’s oldest son, tweeted that Mr. Romney “is forever bitter” about losing the presidency and called for him to be “expelled” from the Republican Party. Ronna McDan- iel, Mr. Romney’s niece and the chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, said that the president had done nothing wrong, the party was “more united than ever behind him” — and that this was not the first time she had disagreed with “Mitt.” And President Trump himself tweeted a video attacking Mr. Romney as a “Democrat secret as- set.” Shortly after 4 p.m. on Wednes- day, Mr. Romney voted to convict Mr. Trump of abuse of power for his pressure campaign on Ukraine to investigate his political rivals, including former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. “Attempting to corrupt an elec- tion to maintain power is about as egregious an assault on the Con- stitution as can be made,” Mr. Romney said in an interview in his Senate office on Wednesday An Act of Defiance by Romney Against a Party He’d Personified By MARK LEIBOVICH Continued on Page A12 Sharon Crawford, 75, a multisport ath- lete from Colorado, is still going against gravity and against the grain. PAGE B7 SPORTSTHURSDAY B7-10 Who Needs a Ski Lift? After more than a century in business, the Maine heritage label makes its debut on the runway. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-8 L. L. Bean on the Catwalk By trading Mookie Betts, Boston has put a cost-conscious plan into action. Will fans tolerate a rebuild? PAGE B7 Unrest in Red Sox Nation The streaming giant spent millions to promote movie contenders, but fore- casters do not expect it to win many Academy Awards on Sunday. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 Netflix’s Iffy Oscar Night A New York district’s embrace of the technology as a safety tool is fueling a broader debate about privacy. PAGE B1 Facial Recognition at School The public relations guru Nate Hinton embraces traditions that make sense and tosses those that don’t. PAGE D1 Fashion’s Rule Breaker In her new NBC show, Fran Drescher inverts the “Nanny” dynamic: Now the kids have to take care of her. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 It’s Funny Either Way A proposal to encourage classical de- sign for new federal buildings has an- gered some architects. PAGE C1 Opposition to a Design Plan In a metropolis under lockdown, the streets are quiet and one day is much like the last. Wuhan Dispatch. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 Outbreak Erases the Calendar Regulators unexpectedly banned the fees, which can cost renters as much as 15 percent of an annual lease. PAGE A20 NEW YORK A19-21 A Surprise End to Broker Fees Prime Minister Boris Johnson is spar- ring with the BBC, drawing compar- isons to President Trump. PAGE A4 War With British Press Flares Kirk Douglas, one of the last surviving movie stars from Holly- wood’s golden age, whose rugged good looks and muscular intensity made him a commanding pres- ence in celebrated films like “Lust for Life,” “Spartacus” and “Paths of Glory,” died on Wednesday at his home in Beverly Hills, Calif. He was 103. The actor Michael Douglas, one of his sons, announced the death in a statement on his Facebook page. Mr. Douglas had made a long and difficult recovery from the ef- fects of a severe stroke he suffered in 1996. In 2011, cane in hand, he came onstage at the Academy Awards ceremony, good-na- turedly flirted with the co-host Anne Hathaway and jokingly stretched out his presentation of the Oscar for best supporting ac- tress. By then, and even more so as he approached 100 and largely dropped out of sight, he was one of the last flickering stars in a Holly- wood firmament that few in Holly- wood’s Kodak Theater on that Os- cars evening could have known except through viewings of old movies now called classics. A vast number filling the hall had not even been born when he was at his screen-star peak, the 1950s and ’60s. But in those years Kirk Douglas was as big a star as there was — a member of a pantheon of leading men, among them Burt Lancaster, Gregory Peck, Steve McQueen and Paul Newman, who rose to fame in the postwar years. And like the others he was in- stantly recognizable: the jutting jaw, the dimpled chin, the piercing gaze and the breaking voice, the From Spartacus to van Gogh, Leading Man of a Golden Age By ROBERT BERKVIST KIRK DOUGLAS, 1916-2020 Kirk Douglas in 1974. JACK MANNING/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A24 WASHINGTON, Pa. — In the winter of 2018, Cindy Callaghan knocked on doors. Lots and lots of doors. A new soldier in the sprawl- ing ranks of the anti-Trump resist- ance, she spent her weekends in the small towns of southwestern Pennsylvania, telling strangers about Conor Lamb, the Democrat who was running for Congress in a district that President Trump car- ried by nearly 20 percentage points. When Mr. Lamb won his special election in a narrow but stunning upset, it seemed that there was an opportunity, if enough people put in enough work, to change minds and thus change the country’s politics. “I felt like there was,” Ms. Callaghan said. Now, as she watches the Repub- licans’ swift rebuff of impeach- ment charges, the meltdown of the Iowa caucuses and the infighting among the supporters of various Democratic presidential candi- dates, she feels that less and less. “It doesn’t matter — find any kind of totally corrupt thing that Trump did and it doesn’t matter,” she said. “Republicans are just unified. They’re a damn steel curtain.” “I’m taking a break until this summer,” she said. Three years ago, when hun- dreds of thousands of people took to the streets in protest of Mr. Trump, the resistance seemed im- mense. Two years ago, when le- gions of canvassers and postcard writers helped flip dozens of con- gressional seats nationwide, it proved effective. Now with the 2020 election approaching, the Democratic Party seems as dis- jointed as ever, while the Trump administration appears not only undismayed but emboldened. And veterans of the four-year- old resistance, particularly in places where they remain out- numbered, are facing up to an un- welcome truth: This is going to be even harder than it once looked. Meetings are packed, pro- testers still gather on freezing sidewalks and the big picture is re- peated like a mantra: The goal is building a solid political infra- structure that will pay off in the long run. But in the back of Once Hopeful in G.O.P. Districts, Resisters Become the Resisted By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON Continued on Page A14 Trying to Dent Support of Trump, They Find a ‘Steel Curtain’ The Trump administration froze New Yorkers out of programs allowing trav- elers to speed through airport lines, in a dispute over immigration. PAGE A18 NATIONAL A10-18 Travel Penalty for New York VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,595 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2020 Late Edition Today, mostly cloudy, periodic rain, high 47. Tonight, heavy rain, sleet and poor-drainage flooding, low 45. Tomorrow, a bit of morning rain, high 50. Weather map, Page B12. $3.00

IN FINALE OF A BITTER IMPEACHMENT BATTLE SPLIT SENATE … · IN FINALE OF A BITTER IMPEACHMENT BATTLE Country s Victory, President Says Democrats Call Trial a Cover-Up By NICHOLAS

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Page 1: IN FINALE OF A BITTER IMPEACHMENT BATTLE SPLIT SENATE … · IN FINALE OF A BITTER IMPEACHMENT BATTLE Country s Victory, President Says Democrats Call Trial a Cover-Up By NICHOLAS

C M Y K Nxxx,2020-02-06,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+"!]![!$!"

Gail Collins PAGE A23

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23

tions that undergirded thecharges, that he sought to pres-sure Ukraine to smear his politicalrivals.

But in a sign of the wideningpartisan divide testing the coun-try and its institutions, the verdictdid not promise finality, whichmembers of both parties con-ceded would come only after theNovember election.

The president himself did notdirectly address his acquittal, butshortly afterward, he announcedon Twitter that he would make apublic statement on Thursday atthe White House about what hecalled “our Country’s VICTORYon the Impeachment Hoax.” Hethen tweeted an attack ad against

WASHINGTON — After fivemonths of hearings, investiga-tions and revelations about Presi-dent Trump’s dealings withUkraine, a divided United StatesSenate acquitted him on Wednes-day of charges that he abused hispower and obstructed Congress toaid his own re-election, bringingan acrimonious impeachmenttrial to its expected end.

In a pair of votes whose out-come was never in doubt, the Sen-ate fell well short of the two-thirdsmargin that would have beenneeded to remove the 45th presi-dent. The verdicts came down —after three weeks of debate — al-most entirely along party lines,with every Democrat voting“guilty” on both charges and Re-publicans uniformly voting “notguilty” on the obstruction of Con-gress charge.

Only one Republican, SenatorMitt Romney of Utah, broke withhis party to judge Mr. Trumpguilty of abuse of power.

It was the third impeachmenttrial of a president and the thirdacquittal in American history, andit ended the way it began: with Re-publicans and Democrats at odds.They disagreed over Mr. Trump’sconduct and his fitness for office,even as some members of his ownparty conceded the basic allega-

SPLIT SENATE CLEARS TRUMP ON EACH COUNTIN FINALE OF A BITTER IMPEACHMENT BATTLE

‘Country’s Victory,’ President Says —Democrats Call Trial a Cover-Up

By NICHOLAS FANDOS

President Trump was acquitted on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress in nearly party-line votes on Wednesday.DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Article I: Abuse of PowerIf all 100 senators are present, 67 votes are needed to convict.

Article II: Obstruction of Congress

Yes

Total

47

53

Dem.

47

0

Rep.

0

53No

Yes

Total

48

52

Dem.

47

0

Rep.

1

52No

Continued on Page A11

DES MOINES — Maybe it wasthe threat of bad weather. Maybeit was a seating assignment deba-cle. Maybe it was a strugglingcampaign organization that stillhadn’t found its footing.

But as Joseph R. Biden Jr. spokeat a major Iowa Democratic Partydinner in November, one thingwas clear: His support appearedtepid compared with the vocalcheering sections of his biggest ri-vals. The reception angered Mr.Biden and his top aides — and itleft little doubt about his standing,three months before the nominat-ing process in the Democraticpresidential race would begin:The former vice president was indeep trouble in Iowa.

Two days after the dinner, Mr.Biden ripped into his campaignchairman, Steve Ricchetti, ac-cording to a person familiar with

the conversation. And at the Bi-den headquarters in Philadelphia,senior officials sternly told staffmembers they needed to step uptheir performance.

The dinner’s damaging opticsmarked the beginning of a flurryof changes: Trusted aides were

deployed to Iowa sooner than an-ticipated. Mr. Biden rescheduledtime with donors to make spacefor a bus tour in Iowa. FormerGov. Tom Vilsack of Iowa and hiswife, Christie Vilsack, major play-ers in Iowa Democratic politics,

Late Start and Missteps Hobbled Biden in IowaThis article is by Katie Glueck,

Jonathan Martin and Thomas Kap-lan.

“We took a gut punch in Iowa,” Joseph R. Biden Jr. said.JORDAN GALE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A16

WASHINGTON — Senator MittRomney of Utah never becamepresident, but he earned a newdistinction on Wednesday: He willbe remembered as the first sena-tor in American history to vote toremove a president of his ownparty from office.

Mr. Romney, the 2012 Republi-can nominee for president, said heexpected swift and extreme re-crimination from his party for hissolitary act of defiance. He wasnot incorrect.

Donald Trump Jr., the presi-dent’s oldest son, tweeted that Mr.Romney “is forever bitter” aboutlosing the presidency and calledfor him to be “expelled” from theRepublican Party. Ronna McDan-iel, Mr. Romney’s niece and thechairwoman of the RepublicanNational Committee, said that the

president had done nothingwrong, the party was “moreunited than ever behind him” —and that this was not the first timeshe had disagreed with “Mitt.”And President Trump himselftweeted a video attacking Mr.Romney as a “Democrat secret as-set.”

Shortly after 4 p.m. on Wednes-day, Mr. Romney voted to convictMr. Trump of abuse of power forhis pressure campaign on Ukraineto investigate his political rivals,including former Vice PresidentJoseph R. Biden Jr.

“Attempting to corrupt an elec-tion to maintain power is about asegregious an assault on the Con-stitution as can be made,” Mr.Romney said in an interview in hisSenate office on Wednesday

An Act of Defiance by RomneyAgainst a Party He’d Personified

By MARK LEIBOVICH

Continued on Page A12

Sharon Crawford, 75, a multisport ath-lete from Colorado, is still going againstgravity and against the grain. PAGE B7

SPORTSTHURSDAY B7-10

Who Needs a Ski Lift?After more than a century in business,the Maine heritage label makes itsdebut on the runway. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-8

L. L. Bean on the Catwalk

By trading Mookie Betts, Boston hasput a cost-conscious plan into action.Will fans tolerate a rebuild? PAGE B7

Unrest in Red Sox Nation

The streaming giant spent millions topromote movie contenders, but fore-casters do not expect it to win manyAcademy Awards on Sunday. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-6

Netflix’s Iffy Oscar Night

A New York district’s embrace of thetechnology as a safety tool is fueling abroader debate about privacy. PAGE B1

Facial Recognition at School

The public relations guru Nate Hintonembraces traditions that make senseand tosses those that don’t. PAGE D1

Fashion’s Rule Breaker

In her new NBC show, Fran Drescherinverts the “Nanny” dynamic: Now thekids have to take care of her. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

It’s Funny Either Way

A proposal to encourage classical de-sign for new federal buildings has an-gered some architects. PAGE C1

Opposition to a Design Plan

In a metropolis under lockdown, thestreets are quiet and one day is muchlike the last. Wuhan Dispatch. PAGE A8

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

Outbreak Erases the Calendar

Regulators unexpectedly banned thefees, which can cost renters as much as15 percent of an annual lease. PAGE A20

NEW YORK A19-21

A Surprise End to Broker FeesPrime Minister Boris Johnson is spar-ring with the BBC, drawing compar-isons to President Trump. PAGE A4

War With British Press Flares

Kirk Douglas, one of the lastsurviving movie stars from Holly-wood’s golden age, whose ruggedgood looks and muscular intensitymade him a commanding pres-ence in celebrated films like “Lustfor Life,” “Spartacus” and “Pathsof Glory,” died on Wednesday athis home in Beverly Hills, Calif.He was 103.

The actor Michael Douglas, oneof his sons, announced the deathin a statement on his Facebookpage.

Mr. Douglas had made a longand difficult recovery from the ef-fects of a severe stroke he sufferedin 1996. In 2011, cane in hand, hecame onstage at the AcademyAwards ceremony, good-na-turedly flirted with the co-host

Anne Hathaway and jokinglystretched out his presentation ofthe Oscar for best supporting ac-tress.

By then, and even more so as heapproached 100 and largelydropped out of sight, he was one ofthe last flickering stars in a Holly-wood firmament that few in Holly-wood’s Kodak Theater on that Os-cars evening could have knownexcept through viewings of oldmovies now called classics. A vastnumber filling the hall had noteven been born when he was at hisscreen-star peak, the 1950s and’60s.

But in those years Kirk Douglaswas as big a star as there was — amember of a pantheon of leadingmen, among them Burt Lancaster,

Gregory Peck, Steve McQueenand Paul Newman, who rose tofame in the postwar years.

And like the others he was in-stantly recognizable: the juttingjaw, the dimpled chin, the piercinggaze and the breaking voice, the

From Spartacus to van Gogh,Leading Man of a Golden Age

By ROBERT BERKVIST

KIRK DOUGLAS, 1916-2020

Kirk Douglas in 1974.JACK MANNING/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A24

WASHINGTON, Pa. — In thewinter of 2018, Cindy Callaghanknocked on doors. Lots and lots ofdoors. A new soldier in the sprawl-ing ranks of the anti-Trump resist-ance, she spent her weekends inthe small towns of southwesternPennsylvania, telling strangersabout Conor Lamb, the Democratwho was running for Congress in adistrict that President Trump car-ried by nearly 20 percentagepoints.

When Mr. Lamb won his specialelection in a narrow but stunningupset, it seemed that there was an

opportunity, if enough people putin enough work, to change mindsand thus change the country’spolitics. “I felt like there was,” Ms.Callaghan said.

Now, as she watches the Repub-licans’ swift rebuff of impeach-ment charges, the meltdown of theIowa caucuses and the infightingamong the supporters of variousDemocratic presidential candi-dates, she feels that less and less.“It doesn’t matter — find any kindof totally corrupt thing that Trumpdid and it doesn’t matter,” she said.“Republicans are just unified.They’re a damn steel curtain.”

“I’m taking a break until thissummer,” she said.

Three years ago, when hun-dreds of thousands of people tookto the streets in protest of Mr.Trump, the resistance seemed im-mense. Two years ago, when le-gions of canvassers and postcardwriters helped flip dozens of con-gressional seats nationwide, itproved effective. Now with the2020 election approaching, the

Democratic Party seems as dis-jointed as ever, while the Trumpadministration appears not onlyundismayed but emboldened.

And veterans of the four-year-old resistance, particularly inplaces where they remain out-numbered, are facing up to an un-welcome truth: This is going to beeven harder than it once looked.

Meetings are packed, pro-testers still gather on freezingsidewalks and the big picture is re-peated like a mantra: The goal isbuilding a solid political infra-structure that will pay off in thelong run. But in the back of

Once Hopeful in G.O.P. Districts, Resisters Become the ResistedBy CAMPBELL ROBERTSON

Continued on Page A14

Trying to Dent Support of Trump, They Find

a ‘Steel Curtain’

The Trump administration froze NewYorkers out of programs allowing trav-elers to speed through airport lines, in adispute over immigration. PAGE A18

NATIONAL A10-18

Travel Penalty for New York

VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,595 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2020

Late EditionToday, mostly cloudy, periodic rain,high 47. Tonight, heavy rain, sleetand poor-drainage flooding, low 45.Tomorrow, a bit of morning rain,high 50. Weather map, Page B12.

$3.00