Business World

Democrat lawmakers say Trump endangers national security

-

WASHINGTON/PALM BEACH, Fla. — Democratic US lawmakers leading the impeachmen­t case against Republican President Donald Trump said on Saturday the president must be removed from office to protect national security and preserve the country’s system of government.

In a 111-page document filed before Mr. Trump’s Senate trial begins in earnest on Tuesday, the lawmakers laid out their arguments supporting charges of abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress against the president.

“The Senate should convict and remove President Trump to avoid serious and long term damage to our democratic values and the nation’s security,” the lawmakers said, for the first time formally calling for the Senate to convict the president and remove him from office.

“The case against the president of the United States is simple, the facts are indisputab­le, and the evidence is overwhelmi­ng,” they said.

The document was an appeal directly to the senators to be impartial. “History will judge each senator’s willingnes­s to rise above partisan difference­s, view the facts honestly and defend the Constituti­on,” the managers said in a statement noting “the President is not a king.”

Mr. Trump’s legal team issued a resounding rejection of the impeachmen­t charges, which were read out in the Senate earlier in the week during formalitie­s setting the stage for the trial. They are expected to release a longer, separate response to the Democrats’ pretrial brief on Monday.

Rejecting the charges, Mr. Trump’s lawyers reiterated the president’s insistence, echoed by many of his fellow Republican­s in Congress, that the charges are nothing more than a partisan attempt to remove him from office, a “dangerous attack on the right of the American people to freely choose their president.”

“This is a brazen and unlawful attempt to overturn the results of the 2016 election and interfere with the 2020 election — now just months away,” they argued in a six-page document released on Saturday.

It was the first time Mr. Trump formally responded to the two articles of impeachmen­t — abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress — that the Democratic-led House approved late last year.

DUELING ARGUMENTS

Mr. Trump and Democratic lawmakers offered dueling arguments about the politicall­y polarizing impeachmen­t case involving Trump’s attempt to persuade Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigat­e Democratic rival Joe Biden last year.

“President Trump categorica­lly and unequivoca­lly denies each and every allegation in both articles of impeachmen­t,” the Trump lawyers’ document said.

As well as the charge of abuse of office for pressuring Ukraine to investigat­e Mr. Biden and his son Hunter Biden, Mr. Trump is also accused of obstructin­g Congress in its investigat­ion into his conduct by refusing to hand over documents and barring administra­tion officials from testifying, even when subpoenaed by House investigat­ors.

The document filed by the Democratic House impeachmen­t managers on Saturday explained why the House passed the two articles of impeachmen­t, and listed evidence supporting the charges.

The evidence included references to informatio­n released in the past few days from Lev Parnas, an associate of Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, who was involved in Giuliani’s contacts with Ukraine’s government.

It also included a finding on Thursday by the nonpartisa­n Government Accountabi­lity Office (GAO) that Trump broke the law when he withheld military aid that Congress had designated for Ukraine. Mr. Trump is charged with withholdin­g the $391 million in security assistance to put pressure on Kiev to announce an investigat­ion of the Bidens, to boost his 2020 re-election prospects.

“An acquittal would also provide license to President Trump and his successors to use taxpayer dollars for personal political ends,” the Democratic lawmakers’ brief said.

Mr. Trump has denied wrongdoing.

The trial in the Republican-led Senate is unlikely to lead to Mr. Trump’s ouster, as no Republican senators have voiced support for doing so and a two-thirds majority vote is required to convict.

Mr. Trump, at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, for the weekend, played a round of golf on Saturday.

The Trump lawyers, in their document, argued that the president acted at all times with full constituti­onal legal authority, said one of three sources close to Trump’s legal team who briefed reporters on a conference call on Saturday.

“We will take the facts headon and we believe that the facts will prove, and have proven, that the president did absolutely nothing wrong,” the source said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS march down Constituti­on Avenue on the Fourth Annual Women’s March in Washington, US, Jan. 18.
REUTERS DEMONSTRAT­ORS march down Constituti­on Avenue on the Fourth Annual Women’s March in Washington, US, Jan. 18.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines