Democrats' decision to televise Trump impeachment hearings could prove
politically perilous
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[November 02, 2019]
By James Oliphant and Chris Kahn
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats in the
U.S. Congress took a major step toward impeaching President Donald Trump
this week when they agreed on the rules for publicly televised hearings
after weeks of testimony behind closed doors. But it is also a step onto
more politically perilous terrain for a party seeking to persuade
Americans that their cause to remove Republican Trump, who they accuse
of abusing his power, is just.
Leaders of the Democratic-run U.S. House of Representatives believe that
putting the main witnesses on TV will convince independent voters and
other doubters that Trump was wrong in asking the Ukrainian government
to dig up dirt on a political rival, Democrat Joe Biden, who hopes to be
the candidate to oust Trump in the 2020 election.
While Republicans and the president face great political risk in the
hearings, so do Democrats. They must present themselves as sober and
trustworthy investigators, former congressional aides and analysts said.
"The allegations – and what the president has admitted to – are serious
enough. They don’t need embellishment. They just need explanation," said
Mieke Eoyang, a former aide to the House Intelligence Committee who
works for the Democratic think tank Third Way.
Lawmakers will have to avoid the urge to grandstand before a TV audience
of millions, Eoyang said. “The hardest thing for members in an open
hearing is to remember they are not the star of the thing.”
Republicans have painted the Democratic-led inquiry as a purely partisan
exercise and will seek to present a different picture of Trump to the
masses of viewers.
Trump has denied wrongdoing, and the expectation is that Trump would not
be convicted at any trial in the Senate because it is controlled by his
fellow Republicans, even if a House majority voted to impeach, similar
to being indicted.
The hearings likely will be a ratings bonanza for television networks as
Democratic President Bill Clinton's impeachment case was in the 1990s.
WALL-TO-WALL COVERAGE
The public phase of the hearings is expected to begin when the House
resumes session later in November. News executives are preparing
wall-to-wall coverage on cable news and digital news networks, networks
told Reuters.
Representative Adam Schiff, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee
and the Democratic point man for the probe, told PBS this week that the
move to public hearings will allow "the American people to hear
firsthand from those that were eyewitnesses to this kind of abuse of
power."
The inquiry focuses on a July 25 telephone call in which Trump asked
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigate Biden, a former
U.S. vice president, and his son Hunter, who had served as a director
for Ukrainian energy company Burisma. The Bidens deny wrongdoing.
One pivotal segment of voters are political independents, who according
to Reuters/Ipsos polling, have remained more reserved about the
impeachment inquiry even as Democrats and Republicans have largely made
up their minds.
An October poll found that less than half of independents surveyed
believe Trump should be impeached. And while 61% of independents
disapprove of the president and 59% support the congressional inquiry,
the poll suggested that they may be turned off if the hearings devolve
into a hyper-partisan spectacle that diverts lawmakers’ attention from
other business.
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President Donald Trump speaks prior to awarding the Medal of Honor
to U.S. Army Master Sgt. Matthew Williams in the East Room of the
White House in Washington, U.S., October 30, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts
When asked about how Congress should prioritize the impeachment
hearings, 54% of independents agreed that lawmakers "should focus on
fixing important problems facing Americans, rather than focusing on
investigating President Trump," while 34% disagreed.
With Trump up for re-election next year, that is the prime danger
Democrats face, said Columbia University political scientist Donald
Green.
"Nobody really expects Trump to be convicted," Green said. "The
question is whether Democrats have the grounds to say that, ‘We
didn’t get a conviction, but there deserves to be one.’"
CIRCUS MAXIMUS
Rodell Mollineau, a Democratic strategist who was a longtime aide to
former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, said it will be difficult
for House leaders to prevent the hearings from becoming a "circus."
"There are certain things out of their control," he said.
Up until now, Democrats have largely controlled the narrative
emerging from closed hearings, publicizing the testimony of former
and current administration officials who have said that Trump did
indeed seek to pressure Ukraine to investigate Biden.
But in the public hearings, Republicans will have a very public
platform, arguing that what Trump did does not justify his removal
from office.
"I think they (Republicans) will show up to play," said
Representative Tom Cole, a member of the House Republican
leadership. "Most of our members have read the transcript (of the
Trump-Zelenskiy call). They do not believe this is an impeachable
offense."
Democratic members will also seek their time in the spotlight as the
media looks for "bombshell" moments, analysts said.
Ahead of the hearings, organizations including AT&T’s CNN and
Comcast’s NBC News and cable news channels have already launched new
features such as podcasts to cover the historic event.
Tim Miller, a Republican and former communications director for Jeb
Bush's 2016 presidential campaign, said Democrats should conduct the
hearings quickly to combat what he termed "impeachment fatigue" that
may be setting in among voters who feel "frustrated" or "that the
whole thing is a charade."
That may be of particular importance to the first-term Democrats who
last year helped the party take control of the House for the first
time in almost a decade. Those Democrats focused more on issues such
as healthcare and less on Trump’s conduct since he took office in
January 2017.
(Reporting by James Oliphant, Chris Kahn and Ken Li; Additional
reporting by Susan Cornwell, Richard Cowan, David Morgan and
Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Ross Colvin and Grant McCool)
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