The Sunday Guardian

IMPEACHMEN­T TRIAL OPENS AS WATCHDOG FAULTS WHITE HOUSE

White House withheld security aid for Ukraine approved by Congress.

- SUSAN CORNWELL, DAVID MORGAN, RICHARD COWAN WASHINGTON

The Senate impeachmen­t trial on whether to remove US President Donald Trump from office formally began on Thursday even as a congressio­nal watchdog found that the White House broke the law by withholdin­g security aid for Ukraine approved by Congress.

The assessment from the nonpartisa­n Government Accountabi­lity Office (GAO) was a setback for Trump, but it was unclear if it would figure in his trial in the Republican-led Senate given that key questions such as whether witnesses will testify or new evidence will be considered remain unanswered.

Democrat Adam Schiff, who heads a team of seven House of Representa­tives members who will serve as prosecutor­s, appeared on the Senate floor to read the two charges passed by the House on Dec. 18 that accused Trump of abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress arising from his dealings with Ukraine.

US Chief Justice John Roberts, wearing his black judicial robe, took an oath to preside over the trial and then swore in the assembled senators who will serve as jurors, asking if they would “do impartial justice.”

The 99 senators present signed their assent one by one. One senator - Republican Jim Inhofe - was in his home state of Oklahoma to be with a family member facing a medical issue, according to his office, but was due to sign next week.

The Senate is expected to acquit Trump, as none of its 53 Republican­s has voiced support for removing him, a step that requires a twothirds majority. Trump has denied wrongdoing and has called the impeachmen­t process a sham.

Opening statements were due to start on Tuesday.

The abuse of power cited in the House articles of impeachmen­t included Trump’s withholdin­g of $391 million in security aid for Ukraine, a move Democrats have said was aimed at pressuring Kiev into investigat­ing political rival Joe Biden, the president’s possible Democratic opponent in the 3 Nov election.

Congress had approved the funds to help Ukraine combat Russia-backed separatist­s. The money was ultimately provided in September after the controvers­y spilled into public view. The GAO said the US Constituti­on does not grant a president authority to unilateral­ly withhold funds, as Trump did. Instead, a president can only withhold spending in limited circumstan­ces spelled out by law, its report said. “Faithful execution of the law does not permit the President to substitute his own policy priorities for those that Congress has enacted into law,” the GAO said on Thursday. The GAO’S findings are not legally binding, but its reports are seen by lawmakers as objective, reliable and generally unconteste­d. It has no prosecutor­ial power. Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen, who sought the GAO investigat­ion, said the findings undercut Republican arguments that there was nothing wrong with Trump’s action. “We now have a clear, lucid finding that the Trump administra­tion violated the law and we know that the president ordered the administra­tion to commit an illegal act,” he said.

Republican Senator John Cornyn said that while there may have been a civil violation of the law, it was not a criminal matter and certainly not an impeachabl­e act.

“The Constituti­on says you impeach presidents for treason, bribery, and high crimes and misdemeano­rs. And it’s none of those things,” said Cornyn, a former judge.

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A man walks on a road blanketed with volcanic ash from the erupting Taal Volcano in Tagaytay, Philippine­s on Monday. REUTERS
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