Houston Chronicle

Impeachmen­t fight turns to who’ll testify

House Dems want to focus on Ukraine call as GOP seeks to broaden the investigat­ion

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With the impeachmen­t inquiry into President Donald Trump poised to enter a new public phase this week, lawmakers sparred Sunday over the witnesses who will be allowed to testify, with Democrats dismissing GOP efforts to call the anonymous whistleblo­wer and former vice president Joe Biden’s son Hunter.

Democrats and Republican­s have crafted dramatical­ly different strategies for controllin­g the narrative of what happened between Trump and Ukraine. Democrats are trying to stay narrow and focused, keeping the story simple. Republican­s want the opposite — bringing in as many characters and events as possible and arguing that while Trump may have acted inappropri­ately, his actions are far from impeachabl­e and are no different from business as usual in Washington.

Trump, meanwhile, urged Republican­s to say his actions were not just “not impeachabl­e” but “PERFECT.”

Both parties’ dueling game plans were in sharp relief Sunday on the morning talk shows.

“This is a very simple, straightfo­rward act. The president broke the law,” Democratic Rep. Jackie Speier of California said on ABC News’ “This Week.” “He went on a telephone call with the president of Ukraine and … proceeded to ask for an investigat­ion of his rival.” She said “this is a very strong case of bribery.”

But Republican­s do not want to focus on the much-discussed

July 25 phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, or even on events of recent months. Instead, they are seeking to broaden the investigat­ion to include actions taken years ago by the Bidens.

On NBC News’s “Meet the Press,” Sen. Rand Paul, RKy., argued that “it’s unfair to treat Trump under one standard and Joe Biden under a different standard.” He claimed that a variety of American elected officials from both parties have in recent years sought to use leverage over Ukraine to advance some kind of agenda.

“I would make the argument that every politician in Washington, other than me, virtually, is trying to manipulate Ukraine to their purposes,” Paul said.

Republican­s have sought to minimize Trump’s role in the campaign to pressure Ukraine, and the list of potential witnesses they released Saturday suggests they will continue to do so.

Among those on the list are Hunter Biden, whose father is a leading Democratic candidate to challenge Trump in 2020; Hunter Biden’s business partner Devon Archer; the unnamed whistleblo­wer, whom Trump and some of his allies have campaigned to publicly identify; the researcher Nellie Ohr of Fusion GPS, which commission­ed a dossier that linked Russia and Trump; and Alexandra Chalupa, a Ukrainian American who worked with the Democratic National Committee.

House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said in a statement Saturday that Democrats would evaluate the requests but that the impeachmen­t probe “will not serve … as a vehicle to undertake the same sham investigat­ions” into the Bidens or the 2016 campaign, or to retaliate against the whistleblo­wer.

Several Democrats on Sunday pushed back against their GOP counterpar­ts’ request.

Speier, a member of the House Intelligen­ce Committee,

raised the issue of the “great risk associated with (the whistleblo­wer’s) life right now.” She said that it is unnecessar­y for the individual to appear before the intelligen­ce panel because other witnesses who were actually on Trump’s phone call with Zelensky will testify.

“The only thing that the whistleblo­wer can say is that he was told by other people about the phone call,” Speier said. “We have the other people coming forward to actually testify. So you have direct evidence, not indirect evidence.”

Speier argued that having Hunter Biden testify would also be “irrelevant” because he “is unrelated to the Ukraine call.” Some of the witnesses Republican­s have requested may be allowed, she added, including National Security Council official Tim Morrison and former Ukraine envoy Kurt Volker, both of whom have already testified behind closed doors.

Another Democrat on the Intelligen­ce Committee, Rep. Sean Maloney of New York, also rejected the call for Hunter Biden to testify.

“He has no knowledge of what the president did or didn’t do here that is the subject of the impeachmen­t hearing,” Maloney said on “Fox News Sunday.”

Some Republican­s, meanwhile, focused on the process of the impeachmen­t inquiry rather than on the substance of the allegation­s against Trump.

Rep. Mac Thornberry, RTexas, argued on “This Week” that “there will be a taint to this one-sided, partisan approach to impeachmen­t.”

He said it would be “inappropri­ate,” but not impeachabl­e, for a president to ask a foreign leader to investigat­e a political rival, as Trump is alleged to have done. The importance of process, Thornberry maintained, cannot be ignored.

“There’s a reason we let murderers and robbers and rapists go free when their due process rights have been violated,” Thornberry said.

In a tweet later Sunday, Trump suggested that saying his actions were “not impeachabl­e” is not good enough. He urged Republican­s to go further.

“The call to the Ukrainian President was PERFECT,” Trump said. “Read the Transcript! There was NOTHING said that was in any way wrong. Republican­s, don’t be led into the fools trap of saying it was not perfect, but is not impeachabl­e. No, it is much stronger than that. NOTHING WAS DONE WRONG!”

On “Fox News Sunday,” Rep. Will Hurd, R-Texas, said the impeachmen­t inquiry “has been a partisan exercise from the very beginning.” He said Republican­s want to hear testimony from Hunter Biden.

“I think we should just turn over every rock and pursue every lead to ultimately get to the truth,” Hurd said.

Hurd also argued that Schiff should be forced to testify about his office’s contacts with the whistleblo­wer, claiming that the committee chairman “misled the American public earlier in the year about what he knew about the contact with the whistleblo­wer.”

Schiff said in September that his committee had “not spoken directly with the whistleblo­wer.” He later said he “should have been much more clear.”

Other Republican­s maintained that Trump sought to hold up much-needed military aid to Ukraine over general concerns about corruption — despite closed-door testimony from witnesses who said the White House had threatened to withdraw the aid unless Kiev announced investigat­ions for Trump’s political benefit.

“I remain sympatheti­c with President Trump’s legitimate concerns about the corruption,” Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “When you’re going to provide hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars into a system, you want to make sure it isn’t corrupt. … I never heard the president say I want to dig up dirt on 2020 opponents.”

 ?? Mark Ralston / AFP via Getty Images ?? A protester holds a “Protect whistleblo­wers” sign Sunday as she walks past supporters of the president outside a book promotion by Donald Trump Jr. on the UCLA campus.
Mark Ralston / AFP via Getty Images A protester holds a “Protect whistleblo­wers” sign Sunday as she walks past supporters of the president outside a book promotion by Donald Trump Jr. on the UCLA campus.

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