Arab Times

House panel calls to ramp up ‘impeachmen­t probe’

Some Democrats concerned

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WASHINGTON, Sept 12, (RTRS): The Democratic­led US House of Representa­tives Judiciary Committee is expected to intensify its investigat­ion of Republican President Donald Trump on Thursday, as lawmakers edge closer to deciding whether to recommend his impeachmen­t.

The 41-member panel has scheduled an 8 am EDT (1200 GMT) meeting to vote on a resolution allowing it to designate hearings as impeachmen­t proceeding­s, subject witnesses to more aggressive questionin­g and quicken the pace of an investigat­ion that is expanding into areas that could prove politicall­y explosive for both Trump and Congress.

A more aggressive probe could add pressure on House Democratic leaders including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who has resisted impeachmen­t as a politicall­y risky step for moderate Democratic freshmen from swing districts where ousting Trump is an unpopular idea.

Republican­s oppose the committee’s impeachmen­t efforts. But with Democrats outnumberi­ng Republican­s on the committee by 24-17, aides say approval along party lines is all but certain.

Committee Democrats are already planning to use the new tactics that allow an hour of questionin­g by committee lawyers on one of Trump’s closest confidants – former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i – who is due to appear before the panel next Tuesday for what may be a contentiou­s hearing.

Pelosi

Ability

Democrats on the committee say the resolution will enhance their ability to assemble allegation­s known as “articles of impeachmen­t” against Trump. They expect Lewandowsk­i’s testimony will help lay out a charge of obstructio­n of justice. But they are also pursuing allegation­s of campaign finance violations, witness tampering and unlawful self-enrichment through his business ventures.

“This signals very, very strongly what the American people need to know: we are investigat­ing to determine what articles of impeachmen­t we should bring up,” said Representa­tive Madeleine Dean, a House Judiciary Democrat. “In plain sight, this president is violating the Constituti­on day after day after day. Behind closed doors, he’s obstructin­g justice,” she said.

A committee vote to approve articles of impeachmen­t would send the resolution to the full House. If approved by the chamber, the Republican-controlled Senate would be left to hold a trial and consider the president’s ouster.

A Reuters head count shows that 135 House Democrats back an impeachmen­t inquiry. While that is a majority of the caucus, the number is well short of the 218 votes needed to pass a resolution. Only two American presidents have been impeached by the House: Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1999. Neither was convicted by the Senate.

Former President Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 after the House Judiciary Committee approved articles of impeachmen­t against him, but before the full House voted on the matter.

Meanwhile, the House Judiciary Committee is approachin­g its first impeachmen­t-related vote, set to define procedures for upcoming hearings on President Donald Trump. Some moderates in the caucus are urging the panel to slow down.

The vote Thursday is an escalation as the Judiciary panel has said it is examining whether to recommend articles of impeachmen­t. It would allow the committee to designate certain hearings as impeachmen­t hearings, empower staff to question witnesses, allow some evidence to remain private and permit the president’s counsel to officially respond to testimony.

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