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BUKU JAWABAN TUGAS MATA KULIAH

TUGAS 2

Nama Mahasiswa : Hendriyanto Wibowo

Nomor Induk Mahasiswa/ NIM : 044047053

Kode/Nama Mata Kuliah : HKUM4101/Bahasa dan Terminologi Hukum

Kode/Nama UPBJJ : UPBJJ-UT BENGKULU

Masa Ujian : 2022/23.2(2023.2)

KEMENTERIAN PENDIDIKAN DAN KEBUDAYAAN


UNIVERSITAS TERBUKA
1. Reading :
House Delivers Impeachment Article to Senate, Triggering only 4th Impeachment Trial of a
President in US History

By Jeremy Herb and Manu Raju, CNN


Updated 0124 GMT (0924 HKT) January 26, 2021

Rand Paul accused of 'transphobic attack' in confirmation hearing (CNN) The House
impeachment managers formally triggered the start of former President Donald Trump's
second impeachment trial Monday evening after they walked across the Capitol and
delivered to the Senate the charge against Trump, the first president in history to be
impeached twice

The contours of Trump's Senate trial are starting to take shape as the ceremonial elements got
underway, with the Senate's longest-serving Democrat expected to preside over the trial and
Democrats still weighing whether to pursue witnesses during proceedings that could take up a
chunk of February.
Chief Justice John Roberts will not be presiding like he did for Trump's first impeachment trial,
according to two sources familiar with the matter. Instead, Sen. Patrick Leahy, the president pro
tempore of the Senate, is expected to preside, the sources said. The Constitution says the chief
justice presides when the person facing trial is the current president of the United States, but
senators preside in other cases, one source said.
As the fourth Senate impeachment trial of a president in US history gets underway, there are still
two big questions looming over the Democrats' impeachment case: Whether they will seek
witnesses and how long the trial will take. The answers to both are still not known yet, according
to multiple sources familiar with the matter
But if the House impeachment managers seek witnesses, they want them to be cooperative,
rather than threaten to fight in court over executive privilege, a snag that hampered Democrats'
efforts to seek witnesses the first time around.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer did not answer Monday whether he was open to having
witnesses appear as part of Trump's impeachment trial, saying that "hopefully" Democrats would
be able to negotiate with Republican Leader Mitch McConnell on the structure of proceedings.
Trump is still working on filling out his legal team, and one lawyer who had been approached
declined to join on Monday. Trump begins speaking with impeachment lawyer, even as he
scrambles to build defense team.
The exact time frame of the trial itself, which will begin the week of February 8, is also unknown,
but multiple impeachment managers have said they don't think it will go as long as the 21 days of
Trump's trial in 2020. The expectation is still, however, that it will take up much of February and
wrap up by month's end, if not sooner.
While the delivery of the impeachment article kicked off the trial Monday evening, though the
substance of the arguments are still two weeks away, while the Senate turns back to confirming
President Joe Biden's Cabinet and potentially taking up the President's Covid-19 relief package
The scheduling leading up to the trial's arguments was resolved Friday after a week's worth of
uncertainty over when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would send the article to the Senate, thanks
to a deal reached between Senate leaders.
Under the agreement, Trump's legal team and the House managers will have two weeks to
exchange pretrial briefs before arguments begin. Senators will be sworn in as jurors on Tuesday.
The schedule gives Trump's legal team time to prepare for the trial. Trump is still working to
assemble a full legal team, people familiar with the matter told CNN on Monday, even as he has
begun to craft a defense strategy with Butch Bowers, the South Carolina lawyer who has agreed
to represent him in the historic proceedings.
Bowers, a respected lawyer from Columbia, South Carolina, who once worked in the Justice
Department under President George W. Bush, has been in conversation with Trump in recent
days, according to two people familiar with the matter. Bowers was connected to Trump by
Graham, who is also helping to add new lawyers to the team.
Charlie Condon, a former South Carolina attorney general, has been approached about joining
the legal team, two people familiar with the matter told CNN. In a brief statement to CNN on
Monday evening, Condon wrote: "I am not representing former President Trump. Thanks.

For Schumer and the Biden administration, the two-week break allows for more of Biden's
Cabinet to be confirmed, as all other Senate business will stop once the trial gets underway, after
Republicans rejected agreeing to split the Senate's days.
Republicans increasingly believe there's virtually no path to Trump's conviction in the Senate,
which would require 17 GOP members to join with Democrats for a two-thirds vote. They've
argued both that the trial itself is unconstitutional because Trump is no longer President -- legal
scholars disagree, though there's no precedent -- and that pushing forward with impeachment
now is divisive.
But Democrats argue there has to be accountability for the former President after he incited the
rioters who ransacked the Capitol on January 6 in an effort to stop Congress from enacting a
peaceful transfer of power.
Ten House Republicans voted to impeach Trump when the House voted earlier this month to
charge him with a single article, incitement of insurrection. A handful of Senate Republicans are
likely to vote to convict him, too, even if it's short of the number required to convict him and bar
him from running for office again.
Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, the only Republican who voted to convict Trump in the first
impeachment trial, said on CNN's "State of the Union" Sunday that it was "pretty clear" that
holding the trial was constitutional, pushing back on the argument coming from some of his
Senate GOP colleagues that would give them a reason to acquit Trump.
"I believe that what is being alleged and what we saw, which is incitement to insurrection, is an
impeachable offense. If not, what is?" Romney said of Trump's actions inciting the pro-Trump
mob that attacked the Capitol.

This story and headline have been updated with additional developments Monday. –
-----------------
Source: Trump impeachment: House delivers article to Senate on Monday triggering only 4th
such trial in US history - CNNPolitics

Accessed: Monday/28/02.2021/8.33

Pertanyaan:
Answer the question in English (with simple structure sentences) based on the skimming result of
the script:
A. What is your conclusion after reading that article?
B. What is the best title that suit for that of article content?
ANSWER :

A. Ten House Republicans voted to impeach Trump when the House voted earlier this month to
charge him with a single article, incitement of insurrection. A handful of Senate Republicans
are likely to vote to convict him, too, even if it's short of the number required to convict him
and bar him from running for office again. Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, the only Republican who
voted to convict Trump in the first impeachment trial, said on CNN's "State of the Union"
Sunday that it was "pretty clear" that holding the trial was constitutional, pushing back on the
argument coming from some of his Senate GOP 'colleagues that would give them a reason to
acquit Trump.

B. the best title that suit for that of article content is ‘’Trump's second impeachment trial’’

2. Reading :
House Delivers Impeachment Article to Senate, Triggering only 4th Impeachment Trial of a
President in US History

By Jeremy Herb and Manu Raju, CNN


Updated 0124 GMT (0924 HKT) January 26, 2021

Rand Paul accused of 'transphobic attack' in confirmation hearing (CNN) The House
impeachment managers formally triggered the start of former President Donald Trump's
second impeachment trial Monday evening after they walked across the Capitol and
delivered to the Senate the charge against Trump, the first president in history to be
impeached twice

The contours of Trump's Senate trial are starting to take shape as the ceremonial elements got
underway, with the Senate's longest-serving Democrat expected to preside over the trial and
Democrats still weighing whether to pursue witnesses during proceedings that could take up a
chunk of February.
Chief Justice John Roberts will not be presiding like he did for Trump's first impeachment trial,
according to two sources familiar with the matter. Instead, Sen. Patrick Leahy, the president pro
tempore of the Senate, is expected to preside, the sources said. The Constitution says the chief
justice presides when the person facing trial is the current president of the United States, but
senators preside in other cases, one source said.
As the fourth Senate impeachment trial of a president in US history gets underway, there are still
two big questions looming over the Democrats' impeachment case: Whether they will seek
witnesses and how long the trial will take. The answers to both are still not known yet, according
to multiple sources familiar with the matter
But if the House impeachment managers seek witnesses, they want them to be cooperative,
rather than threaten to fight in court over executive privilege, a snag that hampered Democrats'
efforts to seek witnesses the first time around.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer did not answer Monday whether he was open to having
witnesses appear as part of Trump's impeachment trial, saying that "hopefully" Democrats would
be able to negotiate with Republican Leader Mitch McConnell on the structure of proceedings.
Trump is still working on filling out his legal team, and one lawyer who had been approached
declined to join on Monday. Trump begins speaking with impeachment lawyer, even as he
scrambles to build defense team.
The exact time frame of the trial itself, which will begin the week of February 8, is also unknown,
but multiple impeachment managers have said they don't think it will go as long as the 21 days of
Trump's trial in 2020. The expectation is still, however, that it will take up much of February and
wrap up by month's end, if not sooner.
While the delivery of the impeachment article kicked off the trial Monday evening, though the
substance of the arguments are still two weeks away, while the Senate turns back to confirming
President Joe Biden's Cabinet and potentially taking up the President's Covid-19 relief package
The scheduling leading up to the trial's arguments was resolved Friday after a week's worth of
uncertainty over when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would send the article to the Senate, thanks
to a deal reached between Senate leaders.
Under the agreement, Trump's legal team and the House managers will have two weeks to
exchange pretrial briefs before arguments begin. Senators will be sworn in as jurors on Tuesday.
The schedule gives Trump's legal team time to prepare for the trial. Trump is still working to
assemble a full legal team, people familiar with the matter told CNN on Monday, even as he has
begun to craft a defense strategy with Butch Bowers, the South Carolina lawyer who has agreed
to represent him in the historic proceedings.
Bowers, a respected lawyer from Columbia, South Carolina, who once worked in the Justice
Department under President George W. Bush, has been in conversation with Trump in recent
days, according to two people familiar with the matter. Bowers was connected to Trump by
Graham, who is also helping to add new lawyers to the team.
Charlie Condon, a former South Carolina attorney general, has been approached about joining
the legal team, two people familiar with the matter told CNN. In a brief statement to CNN on
Monday evening, Condon wrote: "I am not representing former President Trump. Thanks.

For Schumer and the Biden administration, the two-week break allows for more of Biden's
Cabinet to be confirmed, as all other Senate business will stop once the trial gets underway, after
Republicans rejected agreeing to split the Senate's days.
Republicans increasingly believe there's virtually no path to Trump's conviction in the Senate,
which would require 17 GOP members to join with Democrats for a two-thirds vote. They've
argued both that the trial itself is unconstitutional because Trump is no longer President -- legal
scholars disagree, though there's no precedent -- and that pushing forward with impeachment
now is divisive.
But Democrats argue there has to be accountability for the former President after he incited the
rioters who ransacked the Capitol on January 6 in an effort to stop Congress from enacting a
peaceful transfer of power.
Ten House Republicans voted to impeach Trump when the House voted earlier this month to
charge him with a single article, incitement of insurrection. A handful of Senate Republicans are
likely to vote to convict him, too, even if it's short of the number required to convict him and bar
him from running for office again.
Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, the only Republican who voted to convict Trump in the first
impeachment trial, said on CNN's "State of the Union" Sunday that it was "pretty clear" that
holding the trial was constitutional, pushing back on the argument coming from some of his
Senate GOP colleagues that would give them a reason to acquit Trump.
"I believe that what is being alleged and what we saw, which is incitement to insurrection, is an
impeachable offense. If not, what is?" Romney said of Trump's actions inciting the pro-Trump
mob that attacked the Capitol.

This story and headline have been updated with additional developments Monday. –
-----------------
Source: Trump impeachment: House delivers article to Senate on Monday triggering only 4th
such trial in US history - CNNPolitics

Accessed: Monday/28/02.2021/8.33

Pertanyaan:
Answer the question in English (with simple structure sentences) based on the skimming result of
the script:
A. What kind of legal issue does the article talk about?
B. What morality the article is intending to inform?

ANSWER :

A. Rand Paul accused of 'transphobic attack' in confirmation hearing (CNN) The House
impeachment managers formally triggered the start of former President Donald Trump's
second impeachment trial Monday evening after they walked across the Capitol and
delivered to the Senate the charge against Trump, the first president in history to be
impeached twice
B. the former President after he incited the rioters who ransacked the Capitol on January 6 in
an effort to stop Congress from enacting a peaceful transfer of power.

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