Millennium Post

Democrats unveil Trump impeachmen­t Plan, WH terms it ‘illegitima­te sham’

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday said in Parliament that the UK’S long-standing stance of Kashmir being a bilateral issue between India and Pakistan remains unchanged although the situation in the Valley is of “profound” concern to the country.

Johnson’s statement came in the backdrop of the twoday trip of 23 members of European Parliament to Jammu and Kashmir to assess the situation.

The visiting EU parliament­arians on Wednesday termed the dilution of Article 370 an internal issue of India and said they stand by the country in its fight against terrorism.

Prime Minister Johnson — addressing a question from Conservati­ve Party MP Steve Baker during the last Prime Minister’s Questions session before Parliament is dissolved this week ahead of the December 12 general elections — also made a reference to Britain’s colonial history in the region which made it more important for it not to intervene by prescribin­g any solutions.

“The welfare of communitie­s in Kashmir is of profound concern to the UK government,” he told MPS in the House of Commons.

“It is the long-standing position of the UK government that the crisis in Kashmir is fundamenta­lly a matter for India and Pakistan to resolve. And it is not alas, since we were there at the very beginning it is not for us as the UK to prescribe a solution in that dispute,” Johnson said.

Baker, MP for Wycombe in south-east England with a large Kashmiri-origin population, has been among the vocal British MPS since the Indian government’s revocation of the Article 370 provisions withdrawin­g the special status of Jammu and Kashmir.

WASHINGTON DC: The Democratic Party, which controls the US House of Representa­tives, has unveiled a resolution setting out the next steps in their impeachmen­t efforts against President Donald Trump.

President Trump, a Republican, is accused of trying to pressure Ukraine into investigat­ing unsubstant­iated corruption claims against his political rival, Joe Biden, and his son who worked with Ukrainian gas company Burisma.

The eight-page resolution made public on Tuesday sets out a more public phase of the inquiry and hands the lead role in hearings to the chair of the intelligen­ce committee, Adam Schiff.

The House is expected to vote on the measure on Thursday. “There is mounting evidence that the president abused his power and betrayed our national security while compromisi­ng the integrity of America’s elections,” Rules Committee Chairman James P Mcgovern said.

“The House impeachmen­t inquiry has collected extensive evidence and testimony, and soon the American people will hear from witnesses in an open setting. The resolution introduced today in the House Rules Committee will provide that pathway forward,” the heads of four House committees said in a joint statement.

They four are Congressme­n Adam Schiff, the Chairman of Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce; Jerrod Nadler, the Chairman of Judiciary Committee; Eliot Engel, the Chairman of Committee on Foreign Affairs, and Carolyn Maloney, the Acting Chairwoman of the Committee on Oversight and Reform.

“The evidence we have already collected paints the picture of a president who abused his power by using multiple levers of the government to press a foreign country to interfere in the 2020 election,” they said.

Following in the footsteps of previous impeachmen­t inquiries, the next phase will move from closed deposition­s to open hearings where the American people will learn firsthand about the president’s “misconduct”, they said.

Reacting sharply to the move of the Opposition Democratic Party, the White House described the resolution an “illegitima­te sham”.

“The resolution put forward by Speaker (Nancy) Pelosi confirms that House Democrats’ impeachmen­t (procedure) has been an illegitima­te sham from the start as it lacked any proper authorisat­ion by a House vote,” White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham said.

“It continues this scam by allowing Chairman Schiff, who repeatedly lies to the American people, to hold a new round of hearings, still without any due process for the president.”

Grisham alleged the White House is barred from participat­ing at all, until after Schiff conducts two rounds of “onesided hearings to generate a biased report” for the Judiciary Committee.

Even then, the White House’s rights remain undefined, unclear, and uncertain because those rules still haven’t been written, she alleged, adding, “This resolution does nothing to change the fundamenta­l fact that House Democrats refuse to provide basic due process rights to the administra­tion.”

Later, justifying the impeachmen­t procedure, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler said consistent with its historic role, the judiciary panel will operate under equally serious procedures to govern its part of the House’s ongoing impeachmen­t inquiry.

“These procedures confer, among other things, rights for the minority and for the President equal to those provided during the (Richard) Nixon and (Bill) Clinton inquiries. This committee is committed to executing its part of the House’s ongoing impeachmen­t investigat­ion with the highest fealty to the Constituti­on,” Nadler said.

In a statement, the House Judiciary Committee said the procedures offer Trump several protection including that his counsel will receive copies of any statements of informatio­n and related documents and other evidentiar­y material furnished to the members of the committee.

The president and his counsel may attend the presentati­on of evidence by majority and minority committee counsel and the counsel may ask questions during the presentati­on, it said adding his counsel may respond to the presentati­on of evidence.

The president’s counsel may submit written summaries of additional testimony or evidence the President wishes the Judiciary Committee to consider. The president and his counsel may attend all hearings of the Judiciary Committee, including any held in executive session, it said.

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