The Phnom Penh Post

White House says it won’t cooperate with investigat­ion

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A DEFIANT White House declared war on Tuesday against the impeachmen­t investigat­ion of US President Donald Trump, blasting the process as partisan, illegitima­te and unconstitu­tional and saying neither the president nor his administra­tion will cooperate.

In a fiery letter, the White House threw down the gauntlet to US Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the chairmen of three congressio­nal panels leading the inquiry, challengin­g them to proceed with their effort to oust Trump despite zero future cooperatio­n.

“Put simply, you seek to over turn t he resu lts of t he 2016 elect ion a nd deprive the American people of the president t hey have f reely chosen,” White House counsel Pat Cipollone wrote in an eight-page letter.

“Your inquir y lacks any legitimate constit ut iona l foundation, any pretence of fa i r ness, or even t he most elementar y due process protection­s,” he said of the probe, which is weighing whether Trump abused his office by seek i ng a cor r upt ion probe i n Ukraine of his riva l Joe Biden.

“President Tr ump ca nnot per mit his administra­tion to participat­e in t his pa r t i sa n i nqui r y under t hese circumstan­ces.”

Pelosi termed the letter “manifestly wrong” and describing it as “another unlaw f ul attempt to hide t he facts”.

“Mr President, you are not above the law. You will be held accountabl­e,” she said, warning that “continued efforts to hide the truth of the president’s abuse of power from the American people will be regarded as further evidence of obstructio­n”.

The stand-off set Washington on a path toward a constituti­onal crisis and into unknown territory, with the potential for a court showdown just as the nation gears up for the 2020 election.

The White House’s chief objection was the fact the House of Representa­tives had not held a formal vote to launch the inquiry.

Democrats say it is not needed because the impeachmen­t process is in its earliest stages, equivalent to gathering evidence for an indictment.

Only afterwards would the Democrats call a vote. If a majority of House members back impeachmen­t, the matter shifts to a trial in the Senate, currently controlled by Republican­s.

Top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell expressed support for Trump’s strategy, tweeting that the House had failed “to follow the same basic procedures that it has followed for every other President in our history”.

The White House letter capped a day of explosive developmen­ts that included Trump barring a key witness, Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland, from speaking to Congress – calling it a “totally compromise­d kangaroo court”.

In response, Democrats slapped Sondland with a subpoena that “compels” him to appear on Wednesday.

Pe l o s i f or ma l l y l a u nc he d t he i mpeach ment i nqu i r y la st mont h a f ter revelat ions Tr ump pressu red Ukraine’s President Volody myr Zelensk y in a July 25 phone ca ll.

Biden joined the chorus of condemnati­on, tweeting that Trump “must stop stonewalli­ng Congress”.

Sondland, a major donor to Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, was one of a handful of diplomats on a text message chain between July and September that goes to the heart of the investigat­ion.

The messages i nvolv i ng Tr ump’s law yer Rudy Giu l ia n i show t hem coordi nat i ng to pressu re Kiev i nto i nve s t ig at i ng Biden, a s Uk r a i ne sought US militar y aid and access.

House I nt el l igenc e Com mit t e e chairman Adam Schiff said investigat­ors have learned that Sondland has text messages or emails on a personal device that are “deeply relevant” to t he probe, but t hat t he State Department is withholdin­g them.

“The failure to produce this witness, the failure to produce these documents” was “additional strong evidence of obstructio­n,” Schiff told reporters.

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