As Trump fumes, public impeachment hearings set to grab spotlight
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[November 11, 2019]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - This week will mark
a new and unparalleled chapter in Donald Trump’s tumultuous presidency,
as the Democratic-led impeachment probe goes public with televised
hearings into allegations about Trump’s dealings with Ukraine.
Beginning on Wednesday, three witnesses will publicly detail their
concerns, previously expressed behind closed doors, that the Trump
administration sought to tie military aid to Ukraine to an investigation
of the Republican president's potential Democratic rival for the
presidency, Joe Biden.
The testimony will be carried by major broadcast and cable networks and
is expected to be viewed by millions, who will watch current and former
officials from Trump's own administration begin to outline a case for
his potential removal from office.
It has been 20 years since Americans last witnessed impeachment
proceedings, when Republicans brought charges against then-Democratic
President Bill Clinton.
Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives argue Trump abused his
authority in pressing the Ukrainian government to investigate Biden and
his son Hunter, who was on the board of a Ukrainian energy company,
Burisma.
Representative Eric Swalwell, a Democrat on the House Intelligence
Committee, which will hold the hearings on Wednesday and Friday this
week, accused Trump on Sunday of “extortion."
"We have enough evidence from the depositions that we've done to warrant
bringing this forward, evidence of an extortion scheme, using taxpayer
dollars to ask a foreign government to investigate the president's
opponent," Swalwell said on CBS’ "Face the Nation."
Trump argued on Twitter over the weekend that he was not guilty of
misconduct and that the probe was politically driven.
"NOTHING WAS DONE WRONG!" he wrote on Sunday.
'Democrats consider the open hearings to be crucial to building public
support for a formal impeachment vote against Trump. If that occurs, the
Republican-controlled Senate would hold a trial on the charges.
Republicans have so far shown little support for removing Trump from
office, which would require a two-thirds vote in the Senate.
GIULIANI'S ROLE UNDER SCRUTINY
The House Intelligence Committee will first hear from William Taylor,
the top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine, who told the committee in closed-door
testimony that he was unhappy U.S. aid to the country was held up by the
administration.
Taylor said he also became uncomfortable with what he described as an
“irregular channel” of people involved in Ukraine policy, including Rudy
Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer.
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The committee room in the Longworth House Office Building where the
first public hearings in the impeachment inquiry against U.S.
President Donald Trump are scheduled to take place is shown on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., November 6, 2019. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts/
George Kent, a senior State Department official who oversees
Ukraine, will appear at Wednesday’s hearing as well. Kent was also
concerned about Giuliani’s role in conducting shadow diplomacy – and
has testified that he was cut out of the decision-making loop on
Ukraine matters.
On Friday, the committee will hear from former U.S. Ambassador to
Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch. She says she was ousted from her post
after Giuliani and his allies mounted a campaign against her with
what she called “unfounded and false claims by people with clearly
questionable motives.”
Democrats are likely to call further witnesses after this week.
House Republicans released their list on Saturday of witnesses they
would like brought before the committee, including Hunter Biden and
the yet-unnamed whistleblower who first brought the complaint
against Trump over his July 25 call with Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, a Democrat, is unlikely
to summon either to testify, and even some Republicans have opposed
the push from Trump and some of his supporters that the
whistleblower be identified.
“I think we should be protecting the identity of the whistleblower,"
Will Hurd, a former CIA officer and a Republican member of the
committee, said on the "Fox News Sunday" program, "because how we
treat this whistleblower will impact whistleblowers in the future.”
Hurd said, however, he "would love to hear from Hunter Biden" and
accused Democrats of running a "partisan exercise."
Trump and Giuliani have led accusations - without providing evidence
- that Joe Biden sought the dismissal of a Ukrainian prosecutor to
block a corruption probe of Burisma. The Bidens have denied
wrongdoing.
Republicans on the committee will be permitted to question the
witnesses this week and defend the president, although the
president's lawyers will not allowed to do so - something Trump has
complained about bitterly.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Additional reporting by John
Whitesides; Editing by Soyoung Kim and Peter Cooney)
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