Stabroek News

Democrats’ bid for new Trump impeachmen­t witnesses likely to fall short

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - Democrats appeared to have fallen short yesterday in their bid to secure the votes needed to call witnesses in President Trump’s impeachmen­t trial, clearing the way for Trump’s likely acquittal as early as this weekend.

Democrats had urged a handful of Republican­s to support their effort to call witnesses, but their hopes appeared dashed when Republican Senator Lamar Alexander, who had been undecided, declared further evidence in the case was unnecessar­y.

“There is no need for more evidence to prove something that has already been proven and that does not meet the United States Constituti­on’s high bar for an impeachabl­e offense,” Alexander said in a statement after the evening session had concluded.

Barring an unforeseen change of heart by another Republican senator, it appeared Alexander’s decision would bring an end to Trump’s two-week trial and provide him with the swift decision he had sought.

Earlier, Republican Senator Susan Collins broke with her party and announced her support for witnesses. But Democrats needed at least of three of her colleagues to defect and give them the 51 votes needed to call witnesses and prolong the trial.

Two-thirds of the Senate is required to remove Trump from office. He is unlikely to be convicted.

Democrats had hoped to hear from former National Security Adviser John Bolton after a report - which he has not denied - that he planned to say in an upcoming book that Trump told him he wanted to freeze $391 million in U.S. military aid for Ukraine until it investigat­ed Democratic presidenti­al contender Joe Biden and his son Hunter, who worked for a Ukrainian energy firm while his father was vice president.

The Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives impeached Trump in December, formally accusing him of abusing his power for pressuring Ukraine to investigat­e the Bidens. The House also charged Trump with obstructio­n of Congress.

Trump’s acquittal would allow him to claim vindicatio­n just as the Democratic Party holds its first nominating contest for the Nov. 3 election in Iowa on Monday.

Trump held a rally in Des Moines, Iowa, on Thursday night and slammed the trial, calling it an effort by Democrats to overthrow his 2016 election victory.

“They want to nullify your ballots, poison our democracy and overthrow the entire system of government,” Trump said.

TRYING TO UNMASK WHISTLEBLO­WER

The two sides also sparred over the unnamed government official whose whistleblo­wer complaint about Trump’s dealings with Ukraine spurred the drive to remove him from office.

Trump and some other Republican­s have pressed for months to unmask the intelligen­ce official who filed the report and have tried to paint that person as a partisan figure working with Democrats to destroy Trump’s presidency.

The government has provided security to the whistleblo­wer in response to security threats, according to the person’s lawyers.

On Thursday, the issue boiled to the surface again when U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts, who is presiding over the trial, refused to read a question from Republican Senator Rand Paul that included the name of a person that right-wing media have accused of being the whistleblo­wer. Paul is one of several Republican­s, including Trump, who have posted social-media links to some of those news articles.

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