In a Saturday appearance on Fox News, Giuliani urged Trump’s impeachment defense team to approach the Supreme Court and argue that the ongoing proceedings against the president are unconstitutional. Giuliani’s suggestion comes less than two weeks after he told reporters at Trump’s Florida resort Mar-A-Lago on New Year’s Eve that he wanted to be involved in the Senate impeachment trial. “I would testify, I would do demonstrations, I would give lectures, I would give summations,” the attorney said. “Or, I’d do what I do best. I’d try the case.”

Alksne appeared on MSNBC Sunday and called Giuliani’s advice “not very smart” and “silly.”

“So, that’s just the bottom line. The Constitution specifically says that the House has the sole power of impeachment and that the Senate has the sole power to try the impeachment,” she said. “And as much as Giuliani would like to be in charge of that, he is not. Nor is the Supreme Court. And the Supreme Court has even said so in case law. So, there is absolutely no chance the Supreme Court is just going to make a decision that they are going to dismiss this impeachment.”

When asked about the possibility of Giuliani being part of Trump’s legal defense team, Alksne indicated that it is very unlikely the former New York mayor would be selected for such a task given his recent allegedly turbulent interviews with reporters.

“The people at the White House Counsel’s Office know better than that,” she said. “Rudy Giuliani just gave an interview to New York magazine, and he forgot to zip up his pants. No one is going to put this guy in charge of anything.”

Alksne issued similar remarks about Giuliani earlier this month during another appearance on MSNBC. “Well, nobody’s going to put Rudy Giuliani in charge of this trial,” she told host Stephanie Ruhle. “He does not have the attention to detail to try a case at this point.”

Last month, Trump became the third U.S. president to be impeached by the House in a historic vote—230-197-1 on the abuse of power article and 229-198-1 on the obstruction of Congress article. Since House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the formal impeachment inquiry in September, Trump and Giuliani have repeatedly lashed out against members of the Democratic party for aggressively pursuing what they claim is a partisan “hoax.”