Chicago Sun-Times

BOLTON SUMMONED AS BIG IMPEACHMEN­T VOTE LOOMS

- BY LISA MASCARO, ERIC TUCKER AND MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — House investigat­ors are asking former national security adviser John Bolton to testify in their impeachmen­t inquiry, deepening their reach into the White House as the probe accelerate­s toward a potential vote to remove the president.

Democratic lawmakers want to hear next week from Bolton, the hawkish former adviser who openly sparred over the administra­tion’s approach to Ukraine — in particular, President Donald Trump’s reliance on his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani for a back-channel operation. Bolton once derided Giuliani’s work as a “drug deal” and said he wanted no part of it, according to previous testimony.

Bolton’s attorney, Charles Cooper, said Wednesday evening that his client would not appear without a subpoena.

The Democrats are also calling John Eisenberg, the lawyer for the NSC who fielded an Army officer’s concerns over Trump’s phone call with the Ukraine president, and Michel Ellis, another security council official, according to a person familiar with the invitation and granted anonymity to discuss it.

The rush of possible new witnesses comes as the House prepares to take its first official vote Thursday on the process ahead. That includes public hearings in a matter of weeks and the possibilit­y of drafting articles of impeachmen­t against the president.

The White House has urged officials not to testify in the impeachmen­t proceeding­s, and it’s not guaranteed that those called will appear for deposition­s, even if they receive subpoenas as previous witnesses have.

Bolton’s former deputy, Charles Kupperman, has filed a lawsuit in federal court asking a judge to resolve the question of whether he can be forced to testify since he was a close and frequent adviser to the president. Any ruling in that case could presumably have an impact on whether Bolton will testify.

Trump and his Republican allies on Capitol Hill say the entire impeachmen­t inquiry is illegitima­te and are unpersuade­d by the House resolution formally setting out next steps.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the format for the impeachmen­t probe denies Trump the “most basic rights of due process.”

Now in its second month, the investigat­ion is focused on Trump’s July phone call with Ukraine when he asked President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigat­e Democrats and a potential 2020 political rival, Joe Biden, as the White House was withholdin­g military aid Ukraine relies on for its defenses. Democrats contend Trump was proposing a quid-proquo arrangemen­t.

On Thursday, the investigat­ors are to hear from Tim Morrison, a former top GOP aide on Capitol Hill, who served at Trump’s National Security Council and was among those likely monitoring the president’s call with Ukraine.

Late Wednesday, it was disclosed that Morrison was resigning his White House position. He has been a central figure in other testimony about Trump’s dealing with Ukraine.

Earlier in the day, the Democratic and Republican House lawmakers heard fresh testimony about the Trump administra­tion’s unusual back channels to Ukraine.

Two State Department Ukraine experts offered new accounts of Trump’s reliance on Giuliani rather than career diplomats to engage with the East European ally, a struggling democracy facing aggression from Russia.

Foreign Service officer Christophe­r Anderson testified that Bolton cautioned him that Giuliani “was a key voice with the president on Ukraine” and could complicate U.S. goals for the country.

Another Foreign Service officer, Catherine Croft, said that during her time at Trump’s National Security Council, she received “multiple” phone calls from lobbyist Robert Livingston — a former top Republican lawmaker once in line to become House speaker -- telling her the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitc­h, should be fired.

“It was not clear to me at the time -- or now — at whose direction or at whose expense Mr. Livingston was seeking the removal of Ambassador Yovanovitc­h,” she said in prepared remarks obtained by The Associated Press.

Livingston characteri­zed Yovanovitc­h as an “‘Obama holdover’ and associated with George Soros,” she said, referring to the American financier who is often the subject of conservati­ve criticism in the U.S. and Europe.

Most Democrats are expected to support the formal impeachmen­t investigat­ion resolution Thursday, even if they don’t back impeachmen­t itself, saying they are in favor of opening the process with more formal procedures.

 ?? SERGEI GAPON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? It is not known if former National Security Adviser John Bolton will testify in the impeachmen­t inquiry.
SERGEI GAPON/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES It is not known if former National Security Adviser John Bolton will testify in the impeachmen­t inquiry.
 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? Christophe­r Anderson (above) testified Wednesday that John Bolton cautioned him Rudy Giuliani could complicate U.S. goals for Ukraine.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP Christophe­r Anderson (above) testified Wednesday that John Bolton cautioned him Rudy Giuliani could complicate U.S. goals for Ukraine.

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