Former special prosecutor Ken Starr added to a chorus of conservative voices arguing that the Senate doesn’t have the jurisdiction to hold an impeachment trial against former President Donald Trump. Starr, in comments to Fox News on Monday, stated that the upper chamber cannot try a president after leaving office. “The answer is emphatically not,” Starr said, adding that “the text of the Constitution to me absolutely clear that judgment in cases of impeachment” refers to the “removal and possible disqualification.” He argued that a “former officer, by definition, cannot be removed.” Earlier this month, 45 GOP senators voted to reject going ahead with the impeachment trial, scheduled for Feb. 8, in the strongest hint yet that Democrats’ impeachment efforts are doomed to fail. Conviction in the Senate requires 67 votes instead of a simple majority, and it would mean that 17 Republicans join Democrats. Another argument against the looming …