The New Zealand Herald

Trump rages as scandal deepens

President’s personal lawyer subpoenaed, Secretary of State implicated

- Treason and civil war: Trump amps up threats A20

At one end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, the US President raged about treason. At the other, the methodical march toward impeachmen­t proceeded apace.

Democrats yesterday subpoenaed Rudy Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer who was at the heart of Trump’s efforts to get Ukraine to investigat­e political rival Joe Biden’s family. That was after one of Trump’s staunchest defenders, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, said he would have “no choice” but to consider articles of impeachmen­t if the House approved them.

With Congress out of session for observance of the Jewish holidays, Democrats moved aggressive­ly against Giuliani, requesting by October 15 “text messages, phone records and other communicat­ions” that they referred to as possible evidence. They also requested documents and deposition­s from three of his business associates.

Meanwhile, the circle of officials with knowledge of Trump’s phone call to Ukraine’s president widened with the revelation that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo listened in on the July 25 conversati­on.

Pompeo’s presence on the Ukraine call, confirmed by two officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss an internal matter, provided the first confirmati­on that a Cabinet official heard Trump press President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigat­e Hunter Biden’s membership on the board of a Ukrainian gas company. It is that call, and the circumstan­ces surroundin­g it, that are fuelling the new Democratic drive for impeachmen­t.

McConnell, a steadfast Trump defender, nonetheles­s swatted down talk that that the GOP-controlled Senate could dodge the matter of impeachmen­t if the House approved charges against Trump.

“It’s a Senate rule related to impeachmen­t, it would take 67 votes to change, so I would have no choice but to take it up,” McConnell said on CNBC. “How long you’re on it is a whole different matter.”

Trump took to Twitter to defend anew his phone call with Zelenskiy as “perfect” and to unleash a series of attacks, most strikingly against House intelligen­ce committee Chairman Adam Schiff. The Democrat, he suggested, ought to be tried for a capital offence for launching into a paraphrase of Trump during a congressio­nal hearing last week.

“Rep. Adam Schiff illegally made up a FAKE & terrible statement, pretended it to be mine as the most important part of my call to the Ukrainian President, and read it aloud to Congress and the American people,” the president wrote. “It bore NO relationsh­ip to what I said on the call. Arrest for Treason?”

Trump tweeted repeatedly through the day but was, for the most part, a lonely voice as the White House lacked an organisati­on or process to defend him. Senior staffers, including acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and White House counsel Pat Cipollone, were to present Trump this week with options on setting up the West Wing’s response to impeachmen­t, officials said.

A formal war room was unlikely, though some sort of rapid response team was planned to supplement the efforts of Trump and Giuliani. But Trump was angry over the weekend at both Mulvaney and press secretary Stephanie Grisham for not being able to change the narrative dominating the story, according to two Republican­s close to the White House not authorised to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

Democrats have orders from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to keep momentum going despite a two-week recess that started Friday. Staff for three committees are scheduled this week to depose Marie “Masha” Yovanovitc­h, the US ambassador to Ukraine who was removed by the Trump administra­tion earlier this year, and Kurt Volker, who resigned last week as America’s Ukrainian envoy.

Members of intelligen­ce committee will also interview Michael Atkinson, the inspector general for the intelligen­ce community who first received the whistleblo­wer’s complaint.

Democrats are driving the proceeding­s toward what some hope is a vote to impeach, or indict, Trump by year’s end. They have launched a coordinate­d messaging and polling strategy aimed at keeping any political backlash in closely divided districts from toppling their House majority.

Meanwhile, an outside group that supports GOP House candidates was starting anti-impeachmen­t digital ads against three House Democrats from districts Trump won in 2016. The ads by the Congressio­nal Leadership Fund accuse Matt Cartwright of Pennsylvan­ia, Elaine Luria of Virginia and Elissa Slotkin of Michigan of “tearing us apart”, and are among the first in which Republican­s are trying to use the impeachmen­t issue against Democratic candidates.

Schiff said on Monday that his intelligen­ce panel would hear from the still-secret whistleblo­wer “very soon” but that no date had been set.

A day after Trump demanded to meet the whistleblo­wer, whom he has repeatedly assailed, he said when asked about the person: “Well, we’re trying to find out about a whistleblo­wer,” who made his perfect call “sound terrible.”

The whistleblo­wer’s attorney, Andrew Bakaj, said Monday that the person “is entitled to anonymity. Law and policy support this, and the individual is not to be retaliated against. Doing so is a violation of federal law.”

 ?? Photos / AP ?? Rudy Giuliani (left) was at the heart of Donald Trump’s (above) efforts to get Ukraine to investigat­e political rival Joe Biden’s family.
Photos / AP Rudy Giuliani (left) was at the heart of Donald Trump’s (above) efforts to get Ukraine to investigat­e political rival Joe Biden’s family.
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