Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Trump impeachment trial: Five possible twists ahead

For only the third time in history, an American president is on trial after being impeached.

Such a trial could, in theory, lead to President Donald Trump being removed from office. That outcome would be a huge shock - we'll explain why later - but the very fact a president is facing trial is significant.

Here are eight questions and answers that will help you understand the trial.

1) What is impeachment?

Put simply, it's a process that allows senior figures in government to hold other officials (like judges, the president and cabinet members) to account if they're suspected of committing offences while in office.

Those offences can include "treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanours".

After someone is impeached, they then go on trial in the Senate, the upper house of Congress, and its members decide whether they guilty or not. It's a political trial, not a criminal one.

2) What is Mr Trump accused of?

He's facing two articles of impeachment, or charges.

Firstly, he's accused of seeking help from Ukraine's government to help himself get re-elected this November. He's alleged to have held back millions of dollars of military aid to Ukraine and dangled a proposed White House meeting with Ukraine's president, both as bargaining chips.

In exchange, witnesses say he wanted Ukraine to publicly announce an investigation into Joe Biden, the man who's leading the Democratic race to challenge him in the election. Polls suggest Mr Biden would beat him if chosen as the Democratic candidate.

Secondly, after the White House refused to allow staff to testify at the first impeachment hearings last year, Democrats accused Mr Trump of obstructing Congress (the part of the US government that writes and brings in laws, and which was investigating him).

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption What's Ukraine got to do with the Trump impeachment?

Mr Trump has denied any wrongdoing and his legal team say the "flimsy" charges are a "dangerous perversion of the Constitution".

It's worth emphasising that this has nothing to do with the special counsel investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 US election, and into the Trump campaign's ties to Russia. That ended with no further action against Mr Trump himself.

3) Why is there a trial?

This is what led us to this moment:

August 2019 : A whistleblower made allegations against President Trump

: A whistleblower made allegations against President Trump October - December : An investigation took place, with hearings in the House of Representatives (the lower house of Congress, controlled by Mr Trump's Democratic rivals)

: An investigation took place, with hearings in the House of Representatives (the lower house of Congress, controlled by Mr Trump's Democratic rivals) December : Democratic leaders from the House voted to impeach Mr Trump

: Democratic leaders from the House voted to impeach Mr Trump January 2020: The case was passed up to the Senate (controlled by Mr Trump's Republicans), where the trial is taking place

4) What does the Senate trial involve?

The US Constitution is a bit vague when it comes to the specifics of managing impeachment. But there are general rules, based largely on the impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson in 1868. In that case, the president just about kept his job.

The only other president to face an impeachment trial was Bill Clinton in 1999. He too survived.

On the first day of the trial, senators had to vote on the rules drawn up by Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader of the Senate. This led to 12 hours of rancorous debate that stretched deep into the night.

Republicans - who make up the majority in the Senate by 53 members to 47 - rejected attempts by Democrats to introduce new witnesses and documents at the start of the trial. Democrats were left furious by the decision.

Mr McConnell also decided not to proceed with an original plan to cram both sides' opening arguments into four 12-hour days.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption A beginner's guide to impeachment and Trump

Some of the other rules include: no live tweeting from the chamber, and no outside reading materials to be brought in. Senators are also not allowed to speak to those sitting near them while the case is being heard.

Senators will hear from both sides - prosecutors from the House of Representatives and lawyers from the White House - as well as from any witnesses. After that, senators will be given a full day to deliberate before they vote on whether to convict Mr Trump.

5) Could Mr Trump be removed from office?

A two-thirds majority of 67 votes in the 100-seat Senate is required to convict and oust Mr Trump. But because Republicans have a majority of 53 to 47 in the Senate, the president is widely expected to be cleared.

In the unlikely event of Mr Trump being found guilty, he would be removed from office and Vice-President Mike Pence would be sworn in as president.

A simple majority of senators - 51 - could also vote to end the trial should they wish.

6) Who are the main players?

Each senator, including Mr McConnell, has delivered an oath promising to deliver "impartial justice" during the trial. But Mr McConnell last month said: "I'm not an impartial juror", and has also said he and his party are working hand-in-hand with the White House.

"Everything I do during this, I'm co-ordinating with the White House counsel," he told Fox News, to the fury of senior Democrats.

He is not presiding over the trial - that job has gone to Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, although the 100 senators will ultimately act as both judge and jury. Justice Roberts is there to make sure the trial sticks to the predetermined rules.

A group of seven Democrats are acting as impeachment managers - essentially prosecutors for the House, who will present its case for impeachment to the Senate. They include Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff and Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, both frequent targets of Mr Trump's anger.

President Trump's defence team includes special prosecutors from President Bill Clinton's impeachment - Ken Starr and Robert Ray.

Alan Dershowitz, whose past clients include OJ Simpson, is also part of the team led by White House counsel Pat Cipollone and Mr Trump's personal lawyer Jay Sekulow.

7) Will there be witnesses?

No.

This was one of the central questions in the trial. Republicans were keen for a speedy trial with no witnesses or new documents. Democrats wanted to bring in both - they said there was fresh evidence that wasn't heard in the House.

Democrats hoped four moderate swing Republicans would vote with them to call for witnesses, allowing them to hear from the former National Security Adviser John Bolton - who reports suggested had damaging first hand testimony about the president's involvement in the Ukraine scandal.

In the end, only two of the four swing Republicans voted for witnesses, damning the Democrats' hope to hear from Mr Bolton and others.

President Clinton's trial had no live witnesses, but much more evidence and testimony had been gathered by the House before the trial.

Image copyright AFP/Getty Images Image caption Monica Lewinsky testified in a recorded interview during her former lover Bill Clinton's trial in 1999

8) When will this all be over?

Next week, almost certainly.

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