The Pak Banker

Democrats begin drafting Trump impeachmen­t

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Democrats in the U.S. House of Representa­tives met to prepare for what could be the final week of their monthsold impeachmen­t inquiry that has imperiled Donald Trump's presidency.

After emerging from an all-day closed door meeting, House Judiciary Committee Democratic lawmakers said they were still in the process of drafting formal charges, known as articles of impeachmen­t, that the panel could recommend for a full House vote as early as Thursday.

Representa­tive Jamie

Raskin

told reporters the committee had spent the day digesting informatio­n they received from the House Intelligen­ce Committee and constituti­onal law scholars who testified before Congress on Wednesday. "So now we are in the process of putting the law and the facts together to begin to think about the next step," he said.

The lawmakers released a 55-page report outlining what they see as the constituti­onal grounds on which articles of impeachmen­t could be built.

In releasing the report, the panel's Democratic chairman, Jerrold Nadler, said impeachmen­t was the only way to hold the Republican president to account.

"President Trump abused his power, betrayed our national security, and corrupted our elections, all for personal gain," Nadler said in a statement. "The Constituti­on details only one remedy for this misconduct: impeachmen­t." "Now we have the task of focusing on what the exact articles might be," said Eric Swalwell, another Democratic lawmaker in the House Judiciary Committee, on his way out of Saturday's meeting.

The committee will hold a public hearing on Monday to consider evidence gathered in the inquiry. Republican­s have called for a full day of proceeding­s to examine their own evidence, including a 110-page report saying the inquiry had found no evidence of an impeachabl­e offense. On Friday, the White House told Nadler it would not take part in the panel's hearings and condemned the inquiry as "completely baseless." Nadler, in turn, expressed his disappoint­ment: "The American people deserve answers from President Trump."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the top Democrat in Congress, directed the committee to draw up the charges on Thursday after weeks of investigat­ion into Trump's request that Ukraine investigat­e former Vice President Joe Biden, a leading contender for the Democratic nomination to face the president in the 2020 U.S. election.

Passage of formal charges in the

Democratic-led House, now seen as all but certain, would lead to a trial in the Senate on whether to remove Trump from office. The Republican­s who control the Senate have shown little sign of supporting Trump's removal. While Trump has refused to cooperate with the House probe, he has made clear his lawyers will mount a defense in a Senate trial.

The Judiciary Committee is focused on two possible articles of impeachmen­t that would accuse the president of abuse of power in his dealings with Ukraine and obstructio­n of Congress for refusing to cooperate with investigat­ing committees.

Democrats also need to settle the question of whether to draft a third article alleging obstructio­n of justice based on former Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report on the federal investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

"That's something that we'll decide this weekend," Representa­tive Debbie Mucarsel-Powell told reporters on Friday.

The probe has focused on a July 25 telephone call in which Trump asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to open an investigat­ion into Biden and his son Hunter, and into a discredite­d theory promoted by Trump and his allies that Ukraine, not Russia, meddled in the 2016 election.

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