WASHINGTON — Lawmakers on Sunday burrowed into dueling positions over the approaching impeachment trial of former President Donald J. Trump, deepening the schisms in an already divided Senate a day earlier than the Home will ship its cost to lawmakers there.

Senator Mitt Romney of Utah, the only Republican who voted to convict Mr. Trump in his first impeachment trial, stated on Sunday that he believed the previous president had dedicated an impeachable offense, and that the trouble to strive him even after he left workplace was constitutional.

“I consider that what’s being alleged and what we noticed, which is incitement to rebellion, is an impeachable offense,” Mr. Romney stated on “State of the Union” on CNN. “If not, what’s?”

However whilst Mr. Romney signaled his openness to convicting Mr. Trump, different Senate Republicans made clear that they opposed even the concept of a trial and would attempt to dismiss the cost earlier than it started. Taken collectively, the feedback underscored the rift that the riot on the Capitol on Jan. 6 and the following fallout have created within the Republican convention, as senators weighed whether or not they would pay a steeper political worth for breaking with the previous president or for failing to.

Although the Home will transmit the article of impeachment on Monday, Senate leaders agreed on Friday to delay the trial for 2 weeks, giving President Biden time to put in his cupboard and Mr. Trump’s staff time to arrange a protection. However the plan additionally ensures that the trial will dominate Mr. Biden’s essential first days in workplace, and it may inflame partisan tensions even because the president is pushing a message of unity.

Some Senate Republicans, together with Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the minority chief, have grown more and more nervous that if they don’t intervene to distance themselves from Mr. Trump, their ties to the previous president may harm the occasion’s political fortunes for years. Others, skirting the query of whether or not Mr. Trump dedicated an impeachable offense, have argued that holding a Senate trial for a president who has already left workplace can be unconstitutional, and would additional divide the nation.

Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, known as holding a trial “silly” and “counterproductive,” likening it to “taking a bunch of gasoline and pouring it on high of the hearth.”

“The primary likelihood I get to vote to finish this trial,” he stated, “I’ll do it as a result of I feel it’s actually dangerous for America.”

In an interview on “Fox Information Sunday” with Chris Wallace, Mr. Rubio in contrast the transition of energy to that of President Richard M. Nixon.

“In hindsight, I feel we might all agree that President Ford’s pardon was essential for the nation to have the ability to transfer ahead,” Mr. Rubio stated, “and historical past held Richard Nixon fairly accountable for what he did in consequence.”

Requested if he thought Mr. Trump had dedicated an impeachable offense, Senator Mike Rounds, Republican of South Dakota, known as it “a moot level” and argued that pursuing an impeachment trial towards a former president can be each unconstitutional and a waste of time.

“If we begin engaged on an impeachment, which it appears like we’re going to finish up doing, we’ve solely bought a few weeks right here wherein to work really via and permit this president a chance to kind a cupboard,” Mr. Rounds stated on “Meet the Press” on NBC. “Plenty of us would favor to possibly work via these points as an alternative.”

Consultant Madeleine Dean, Democrat of Pennsylvania and one of the impeachment managers who will strive the case towards Mr. Trump, stated on Sunday that she anticipated the trial to “go sooner” than his trial in 2020, which lasted 21 days.

“Some individuals would love us to show the web page: ‘Oh, let’s transfer on,’” Ms. Dean stated on “State of the Union.” “We should bear in mind, I consider, that this impeachment trial, I hope conviction, final disqualification, are the very first highly effective steps towards unity.”

Ms. Dean declined to say whether or not impeachment managers would come with a New York Times report on Friday that Mr. Trump had thought-about firing the appearing legal professional basic whereas in workplace to wield the Justice Division’s energy to attempt to power state lawmakers in Georgia to overturn its presidential election outcomes. However the impeachment managers have beforehand signaled that they intend to current a comparatively easy case, with the siege that performed out in public view on the coronary heart of their case.

Mr. Romney, citing each the Capitol riot and an hourlong call Mr. Trump placed to the Georgia secretary of state pressuring him to overturn the election outcomes, stated the allegations already within the article of impeachment “themselves are of a adequate nature that the American persons are outraged.”

The delay to the beginning of the trial additionally signifies that lawmakers will proceed consideration of one other coronavirus stimulus package deal. A bipartisan group of lawmakers, together with Mr. Romney, met on Sunday with Brian Deese, Mr. Biden’s high financial aide, to debate the administration’s proposed $1.9 trillion bill. Republicans have largely spurned that supply, balking on the price.

“I’m open to that dialogue. I need to hear what the White Home has to say,” Mr. Romney stated. “However on the similar time, I feel individuals acknowledge it’s essential that we don’t borrow tons of of billions — really trillions of {dollars} from the Chinese language — for issues that will not be completely needed.”

Chris Cameron contributed reporting.