Trump impeachment probe goes public as political drama mounts
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[November 13, 2019]
By Patricia Zengerle and Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The impeachment
inquiry into U.S. President Donald Trump will reach a critical juncture
on Wednesday when lawmakers launch their first televised public
hearings, marking a new, high-stakes phase of a tumultuous presidency.
Democrats leading the U.S. House of Representatives probe have summoned
three U.S. diplomats – all of whom have previously expressed alarm in
closed-door testimony about Trump's dealings with Ukraine - to detail
their concerns under the glare of wall-to-wall news coverage.
Trump's fellow Republicans, who will also be able to question the
witnesses, have crafted a defense strategy that will argue he did
nothing wrong when he asked Ukraine's new president to investigate Joe
Biden, a former vice president and key 2020 re-election rival.
Both sides will be playing to a sharply polarized electorate as they
move deeper into a six-week-old investigation that has shadowed Trump's
presidency with the threat of being removed from office even as he
campaigns for a second term.
It has been two decades since Americans last witnessed impeachment
proceedings against a president, and these will be the first of the
social media era. Republicans, who then controlled the House, brought
impeachment charges against Democratic President Bill Clinton in a
scandal involving his sexual relationship with a White House intern. The
Senate ultimately voted to keep Clinton in office.
For a graphic version of the impeachment inquiry, click:
https://graphics.reuters.com/
USA-TRUMP-WHISTLEBLOWER/
0100B2EZ1MK/index.html
FOCUS ON UKRAINE
Though no president has ever been removed from office by impeachment,
that has not deterred Democrats, who are looking into whether Trump
abused his power by withholding nearly $400 million in security
assistance to Ukraine to pressure the vulnerable U.S. ally. The focus is
a July 25 phone call in which Trump asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy to open a corruption investigation into Biden and his son and
into a discredited theory that Ukraine may have meddled in the 2016 U.S.
elections.
Trump has denied any wrongdoing, derided some of the current and former
U.S. officials who have appeared before committees as "Never Trumpers"
and branded the investigation a witch hunt aimed at hurting his
re-election changes.
"President Trump's pressure campaign was 'out of bounds,' and every time
he insists that it was 'perfect' he is saying that he is above the law,"
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Twitter, referring to how the
Republican president has described his actions in the Ukraine saga.
Trump also suggested on Tuesday that he would likely release the
transcript of an April 12 conversation with Zelenskiy this week but gave
no other detail. It was the July phone call that prompted an anonymous
whistleblower to set off the impeachment probe.
HUGE AUDIENCE EXPECTED FOR POLITICAL DRAMA
With a potential television audience of tens of millions looking on, two
witnesses – William Taylor, top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine, and Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State George Kent – will be sworn in before the
House Intelligence Committee on Wednesday.
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President Donald Trump delivers remarks at a Veterans Day Parade and
Wreath Laying ceremony in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., November
11, 2019. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Lawmakers leading the probe released transcripts of closed-door
testimony last week showing that Taylor believed a White House-led
effort to pressure Kiev to investigate Ukrainian energy company
Burisma was motivated by a desire to help Trump win re-election next
year.
Taylor testified he had been concerned to learn that security aid to
Ukraine, as well as a White House meeting between Trump and
Zelenskiy, had been delayed for political reasons.
Kent said he had been alarmed by efforts by Trump’s personal lawyer,
Rudy Giuliani, and others to pressure Ukraine. He said Giuliani -
who Democrats have accused of conducting a shadow foreign policy
effort in Ukraine – had conducted a "campaign full of lies" against
Marie Yovanovitch, who was abruptly pulled from her post as U.S.
ambassador to Ukraine in May. She will give public testimony on
Friday.
Taylor and Kent were testifying together because "they both were
witness to the full storyline of the president's misconduct," an
official working on the impeachment inquiry said.
For both sides, the electoral implications are clear in the
impeachment process, which could crowd out other issues like the
economy and immigration as the 2020 election campaign gathers steam.
Democrats are hoping to convince independent voters and other
doubters that Trump was wrong not only in asking Ukraine to dig up
dirt on his rival but in making it a quid-pro-quo proposition, Latin
for a favor in exchange for a favor.
Republicans want to paint the hearings to voters as a partisan
exercise by Trump's opponents who resented failing to gain more
politically from an earlier special counsel's investigation of the
Trump team's alleged ties to Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
Trump is the fourth U.S. president to face impeachment proceedings.
None were removed from office, although Richard Nixon resigned as he
faced almost certain impeachment in 1974 over the Watergate scandal.
This week's hearings are seen as a likely prelude to articles of
impeachment - formal charges - against Trump being brought to a vote
in the Democratic-controlled House. Even if that leads to an actual
impeachment trial in the Senate, Republicans who control the chamber
are considered highly unlikely to vote for Trump's removal.
(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Scott Malone and Tom
Brown)
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