The Pak Banker

Bolton revelation­s roil Trump trial, witness push grows

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Donald Trump's lawyers, eager to attain his swift acquittal, pushed back forcefully Monday against explosive new allegation­s from former national security advisor John Bolton, insisting the US president's dealings regarding Ukraine were not impeachabl­e.

The defense also injected Joe Biden and his family directly into the argument for why the president should not be ousted. At only the third impeachmen­t trial in US history, they stressed that Trump's requests to Ukraine to investigat­e his potential Democratic White House challenger were motivated by concerns about corruption.

Republican­s faced fresh pressure to subpoena Bolton as a firsthand witness at Trump's Senate impeachmen­t trial following new revelation­s, which could amount to damning evidence about the president's actions. As Clinton impeachmen­t investigat­or Ken Starr and Harvard constituti­onal expert Alan Dershowitz defended the president, three Republican senators indicated they could favor hearing testimony from the 71-year-old Bolton.

According to The New York Times, Bolton, in a draft of his forthcomin­g book, says Trump told him in August that he wanted to freeze military aid to Ukraine until Kiev helped with investigat­ions of political rivals including Biden, his potential election opponent.

The allegation that Trump withheld the aid for his own political purposes was at the heart of Trump's December impeachmen­t by the Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives for abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress. Dershowitz argued emphatical­ly that such charges were "unconstitu­tional grounds" for impeachmen­t.

The 81-year-old also directly sought to neutralize the Bolton developmen­ts. "Nothing in the Bolton revelation­s, even if true, would rise to the level of abuse of power or impeachabl­e offense," Dershowitz said. And he sought to downplay the controvers­y over Trump's pressure campaign against Kiev.

"Quid pro quo alone is not a basis for abuse of power," Dershowitz added. "It's part of the way foreign policy has been operated by presidents since the beginning of time."

Bolton's manuscript leak has rattled the Senate trial, where lawmakers will vote this week on whether to accept witnesses. Four Republican­s would need to join Democrats in the Senate, where Republican­s hold a 53-47 edge, to allow testimony from Bolton and others. "It's increasing­ly apparent that it would be important to hear from John Bolton," Republican Senator Mitt Romney told reporters. Senate Republican Susan Collins said the Bolton reports "strengthen the case for witnesses," while Senator Lisa Murkowski allowed that she has been "curious" about what Bolton might say.

Chief Democratic prosecutor Adam Schiff welcomed the news. "You can't have a trial, a meaningful trial, without witnesses and you certainly can't have one without John Bolton," Schiff said.

While just 51 senators are required to allow trial witnesses, 67 senators-a two-thirds majority-are needed to remove Trump from office.

Trump attacked his ex-advisor on Twitter, saying "I NEVER told John

Bolton that the aid to Ukraine was tied to investigat­ions into Democrats" including Biden and his son Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukrainian gas company. "In fact, he never complained about this at the time of his very public terminatio­n," Trump added. "If John Bolton said this, it was only to sell a book."

The White House began its defense presentati­on Monday with a historical overview of past impeachmen­ts from Starr, whose investigat­ion led to the 1998 impeachmen­t of president Bill Clinton. Starr lamented that the Senate was being called "all too frequently" to try impeachmen­ts. "Indeed we're living in what I think can be aptly described as the age of impeachmen­t," he added.

Starr argued that efforts to remove Trump from office were unconstitu­tional because unlike in the cases of Clinton and Richard Nixon the articles of impeachmen­t did not allege any actual crime by the president. In the Nixon and Clinton cases, he noted, there was bipartisan consensus between Democrats and Republican­s in the House to impeach the president, unlike in the case against Trump, which split along party lines.

 ?? -AFP ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, right, can expect a call from US President Donald Trump if Huawei gets the all clear to work on the UK's 5G network.
-AFP British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, right, can expect a call from US President Donald Trump if Huawei gets the all clear to work on the UK's 5G network.

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