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		Et tu, Mitt? Trump blasts Republican senator as impeachment battle heats 
		up
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		 [October 07, 2019] 
		By Andrea Shalal and David Brunnstrom 
 WASHINGTON/ATHENS (Reuters) - U.S. 
		President Donald Trump on Saturday opened a new front in the impeachment 
		battle that threatens his administration, blasting a prominent member of 
		his party for criticizing his push to get foreign nations to probe a 
		leading Democratic rival.
 
 The Republican president, who launched a stream of invective at 
		Democrats and the media this week as an impeachment probe in Congress 
		widened, tweeted that U.S. Senator Mitt Romney was a "pompous 'ass' who 
		has been fighting me from the beginning."
 
 Romney, who lost the 2012 election to Democratic incumbent President 
		Barack Obama, criticized Trump on Friday for asking China to investigate 
		former Vice President Joe Biden, who is seeking the 2020 Democratic 
		presidential nomination.
 
 The Utah Republican said Trump's appeal to China was "wrong and 
		appalling."
 
 In a later tweet, Trump said he was hearing that people in Utah 
		regretted electing Romney to the Senate in 2018. "I agree! He is a fool 
		who is playing right into the hands of the Do Nothing Democrats! #IMPEACHMITTROMNEY," 
		Trump wrote.
 
		
		 
		
 Trump also defended again as "appropriate" the July 25 phone call with 
		Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy that triggered the impeachment 
		inquiry in the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives, and said 
		his call for China to investigate Biden and his son Hunter was linked to 
		corruption, not politics.
 
 Another Republican senator, Susan Collins of Maine, on Saturday also 
		criticized Trump for exhorting China to investigate the Bidens, calling 
		it "completely inappropriate" in remarks to reporters at an event in her 
		home state, according to the Bangor Daily News.
 
 "I thought the president made a big mistake by asking China to get 
		involved in investigating a political opponent," Collins said, according 
		to the local report.
 
 House Democrats are examining whether there are grounds to impeach Trump 
		based on a whistleblower's complaint that said he asked Zelenskiy to 
		help probe the Bidens. Hunter Biden was on the board of a Ukrainian 
		natural gas company for several years.
 
 There is no evidence of wrongdoing by either the former vice president 
		or his son.
 
 Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a Trump ally, said on Saturday the State 
		Department had issued an initial response to a request by the House 
		Foreign Affairs Committee for documents tied to U.S. contacts with the 
		Ukrainian government. The panel issued Pompeo a subpoena on Sept. 27.
 
 "The State Department sent a letter last night to Congress, which is our 
		initial response to the document request. We will obviously do all the 
		things we are required to by law," Pompeo said in a news conference in 
		Greece. He did not elaborate on the contents of the letter.
 
 An official from the House Foreign Affairs Committee said in a statement 
		to Reuters that Pompeo had "failed to meet the deadline to produce 
		documents required by the subpoena," but confirmed the State Department 
		had contacted the three House committees involved in the probes.
 
 "We hope the department will cooperate in full promptly," said the 
		official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
 
		
		 
		'GOTCHA GAME'
 
 Pompeo, who has acknowledged he listened to the July 25 call between 
		Trump and Zelenskiy, objected last week to efforts by Democrats to 
		obtain depositions from current and former department officials.
 
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			President-elect Donald Trump (L) and former Massachusetts Governor 
			Mitt Romney emerge after their meeting at the main clubhouse at 
			Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, U.S., November 
			19, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo 
            
 
            Asked at another event on Saturday if there were any red flags in 
			the Ukraine saga that required further investigation, Pompeo said he 
			did not think the audience was interested in hearing about the 
			issue."This is what's wrong, when the world doesn't focus on the 
			things that are right, the things that matter, the things that 
			impact real people's lives and instead you get caught up in silly 
			gotcha game?" he said.He also addressed a notion Trump has long held 
			that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, a 
			theory that runs counter to the U.S. intelligence community's 
			findings that it was Russia that meddled in the campaign.
 Pompeo said "governments have an obligation and indeed a duty to 
			make sure that elections happen with integrity, without interference 
			from any government, whether that's the Ukrainian government or any 
			other."
 
 Lawmakers are looking at whether Trump jeopardized national security 
			and the integrity of U.S. elections for personal political gain. 
			Trump has called the impeachment investigation a "hoax" and accused 
			the media and Democrats of corruption.
 
 Rudy Giuliani, Trump's personal lawyer, told Reuters in a phone 
			interview on Saturday that the president in the July 25 call had not 
			offered his Ukrainian counterpart any "quid pro quo" for his 
			cooperation in probing Biden and his son.
 
 "One thing clear about the conversation is, there's no quid pro 
			quo," said the former New York mayor, who has emerged as a central 
			figure in the scandal. The House Intelligence Committee has issued a 
			subpoena to Giuliani, setting an Oct. 15 deadline for him to turn 
			over documents related to his work with Ukrainians on Trump's 
			behalf.
 
 House Democrats subpoenaed the White House for documents on Friday. 
			White House spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham said the subpoena "changes 
			nothing" and that it would be ultimately shown that Trump did 
			nothing wrong.
 
             
			The probe could lead to approval of articles of impeachment - or 
			formal charges - against Trump in the House. A trial on whether to 
			remove Trump from office would then be held in the 
			Republican-controlled Senate.
 A two-thirds majority of the senators present would be needed to 
			oust Trump, which means 20 Republicans would have to jump ship if 
			all the Democrats and the two independents who caucus with Democrats 
			form a united front.
 
 Although Trump's Senate firewall has no visible cracks so far, 
			Romney's willingness to step out of formation and criticize Trump 
			over his calls for foreign investigations of a political opponent 
			could act as a catalyst for others.
 
 Romney savaged Trump during the 2016 campaign, calling him a "con 
			man" who was unfit for the presidency, but the two men later set 
			aside their differences. Trump endorsed Romney's political comeback 
			last year.
 
 (Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Tim Gardner, and Julia Harte in 
			Washington, David Brunnstrom in Athens and Karen Freifeld in New 
			York; Writing by Paul Simao; Editing by Chris Reese and Richard 
			Chang)
 
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