Los Angeles Times

‘A dud’ for impeachmen­t case

Hearings seem to support Pelosi’s plan of holding off for now

- By Jennifer Haberkorn

WASHINGTON — Robert S. Mueller III did little on Wednesday to boost the prospects of impeaching President Trump.

The former special counsel’s highly anticipate­d testimony before Congress did not deliver the sort of splashy moment that circulates on cable TV. Instead, as he promised, Mueller stuck carefully to the text of his investigat­ive report, occasional­ly — at times haltingly — offering a nuance, but often providing one-word answers to questions.

The hearings seemed likely do little more than harden the opinions held by the public — and lawmakers — on President Trump and whether he should be removed from office.

Democratic supporters of impeachmen­t were openly disappoint­ed that the hearing did not deliver fireworks.

“The Mueller report is a bombshell — it’s deeply incriminat­ing,” said Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael), who supports beginning an impeachmen­t inquiry against the president. “The Mueller testimony was a dud.”

For House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco), that result may come as a vindicatio­n. Despite pressure from some Democrats, Pelosi has held her caucus back from starting

an impeachmen­t inquiry out of concern that it could potentiall­y backfire without broad, bipartisan support and overwhelmi­ng evidence.

“It’s been a pretty interestin­g day, a historic one, in fact,” Pelosi said at a news conference several hours after the testimony ended. The hearing marked “a crossing of a threshold in terms of the public awareness” of what Trump did, Pelosi said.

But she notably did not endorse moving to open a formal impeachmen­t process.

“We still have some outstandin­g matters in the courts,” she said, adding that if the House pursues impeachmen­t, it “would have to be done with our strongest possible hand.”

Some supporters of impeachmen­t had been hoping that Mueller would deliver a TV moment that would generate bipartisan outrage in a way that his dense, 448-page report had not.

As the hearing wrapped up Wednesday, the minority of Democrats who want to begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s — roughly 85 of the 235 House Democrats — gained a new compatriot, freshman Rep. Lori Trahan of Massachuse­tts. It is doubtful they gained many more.

“We’ve establishe­d substantia­l evidence that the president committed obstructio­n of justice multiple times. What the American people choose to do with that, we’ll see in the coming days,” Rep. Ted Lieu (DTorrance) said after the hearing.

The taciturn Mueller carefully avoided moments that could be used for partisan advantage. He turned down requests to read key passages from his report aloud. And he issued a correction in the afternoon to one of the Democrats’ biggest coups of the morning.

He initially told Lieu that he hadn’t charged the president with a crime because of a Justice Department policy that a sitting president should not be indicted, implying that but for the policy, he would have brought charges. He later said that he misspoke: “We did not reach a determinat­ion as to whether the president committed a crime,” he said.

Impeachmen­t supporters had viewed Mueller’s testimony as the best — perhaps last — major opportunit­y to change public opinion; polls so far show a majority are opposed to having the House open an impeachmen­t inquiry.

Within days, lawmakers will leave Washington for their summer break, probably muting impeachmen­t talk until the fall. By then, the 2020 presidenti­al race is likely to take its place as the top political story.

Democratic lawmakers did land several wins on Wednesday:

Mueller acknowledg­ed that he did not exonerate Trump of obstructio­n of justice. He also affirmed several key findings of the report as lawmakers walked him through instances in which the report demonstrat­ed that the president had tried to obstruct justice.

To that extent, the hearing probably will help keep Democratic partisans fired up. But converting voters who do not already have a strongly held view on impeachmen­t was always going to be a much tougher task.

Democrats who support impeachmen­t said they would “take stock of the situation” after the hearings.

“Obviously there are many members of Congress who read the report back when it came out who felt there was sufficient evidence even in the redacted version to launch an impeachmen­t inquiry,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.). “That is one very logical way to go.”

Some impeachmen­t supporters said they hoped Mueller’s testimony — as low-key as it may have been — could serve as the penultimat­e chapter before the start of a formal inquiry.

“We can no longer point to some forthcomin­g Mueller testimony or some report that we need to see. We now have all the facts necessary to make a decision on where we go on this,” Huffman said.

“I don’t know any other way to light my hair on fire. I feel very strongly about this issue. I just need a few dozen more colleagues to get there.”

Pelosi has argued that pursuing impeachmen­t without bipartisan and broad public support would be fruitless and perhaps even embolden the president. Even if the House impeached him, he would not be removed from office unless two-thirds of the GOPcontrol­led Senate agreed to do so, something that currently seems a political impossibil­ity.

Republican­s, for their part, declared victory, citing Mueller’s slow responses at times to rapid-fire questions from lawmakers.

“No one could have watched the hearing and walked away believing that Director Mueller had a firm grasp of the details of the 448-page report,” said Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.). “It’s probably predetermi­ned where the Democrats want to go with this, but at the same time, I think the American people will see it as time to turn the page, close the book, finish the chapter, and get on with life.”

Trump loudly seconded that sentiment.

“The Democrats had nothing and now they have less than nothing,” he told reporters at the White House before leaving for a fundraisin­g event in West Virginia. “I think they’re going to lose the 2020 election very big, including congressio­nal seats, because of the path that they chose.”

 ?? Carolyn Kaster Associated Press ?? “THE DEMOCRATS had nothing and now they have less than nothing,” President Trump said before leaving Washington for a fundraiser in West Virginia.
Carolyn Kaster Associated Press “THE DEMOCRATS had nothing and now they have less than nothing,” President Trump said before leaving Washington for a fundraiser in West Virginia.
 ?? Andrew Caballero-Reynolds AFP/Getty Images ?? HOUSE SPEAKER Nancy Pelosi said the hearings were “historic” and had raised awareness of Trump’s actions, but she wasn’t ready to back impeachmen­t.
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds AFP/Getty Images HOUSE SPEAKER Nancy Pelosi said the hearings were “historic” and had raised awareness of Trump’s actions, but she wasn’t ready to back impeachmen­t.

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