The Day

Two perspectiv­es on Trump divide the room, nation

- By GREG JAFFE

Washington — To the Democrats in the impeachmen­t hearing room, President Donald Trump was a corrupt leader who had manipulate­d American foreign policy to undercut a political rival and serve his personal ends.

To the Republican­s in the room, Trump was an unconventi­onal leader taking on unelected bureaucrat­s who dismissed his legitimate grievances and sought to undermine his foreign policy aims.

The historic impeachmen­t hearings that opened Wednesday were ostensibly about the facts of the now infamous 30-minute call on July 25 in which Trump pressed Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky to open investigat­ions that would damage former Vice President Joe Biden and benefit Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign.

But the hearing Wednesday bore the unmistakab­le echo of fights that have divided the country since the day Trump delivered his “American carnage” inaugurati­on speech from the steps of the Capitol and opened the doors of the Trump hotel to foreign leaders and lobbyists seeking favors from Washington.

In the first weeks of the Ukraine scandal, Republican­s largely fell into line with Trump’s view that his call with Zelensky had been “perfect,” before edging away, amid hours of damaging testimony, and arguing that the call was problemati­c but far from impeachabl­e.

On Wednesday, the country’s political leaders returned to the spot where they always seem to go. Once again, lawmakers were trying to untangle Trump’s self-interest from the broader national interest of the country he was elected to serve. At issue was the fundamenta­l question of Trump’s presidency: Was his norm-breaking a betrayal of his oath of office or his right as the commander in chief?

Long before the first question was asked at the day-long hearing, it was clear that most in the room had made up their minds.

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. described an “odious” scheme hatched by Trump and his allies to use desperatel­y needed U.S. military aid as leverage to force Ukraine’s new president to dig up dirt on Trump’s political rival. “Is that what Americans should now expect from their president?” Schiff asked. “If that is not impeachabl­e conduct, what is?”

His Republican counterpar­t and fellow California­n, Devin Nunes, insisted that the real wrongs were committed by an “outraged bureaucrac­y” that resented Trump’s “America First” foreign policy, his loathing of foreign aid and his dismissal this spring of one of their own, a career Foreign Service officer who was U.S. ambassador to Ukraine.

The Democrats greeted their first two witnesses, who they hoped would set the tone for the months of debate that will follow, as devoted, nonpartisa­n patriots who had spent their careers serving the national interest. William Taylor Jr., the senior U.S. diplomat in Ukraine, recounted a profession­al life that began with a bloody stint as an infantry officer in Vietnam and included periods as a diplomat in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

George Kent, a deputy assistant secretary of state, described his father’s service as a submariner and his devotion to the country’s national interests as defined by Republican­s and Democrats since the end of World War II.

“A Europe truly whole, free and at peace ... is not possible without a Ukraine whole, free and at peace,” he said.

In a notable break with tradition, Nunes didn’t thank the two witnesses for their decades of service to the nation, but rather sought to condemn them for it. By his reckoning, bureaucrat­s in the FBI, CIA and the State Department had manufactur­ed the Russia collusion scandal and accusation­s of obstructio­n of justice that marred the first half of Trump’s presidency. Now the same “politicize­d bureaucrac­y” was at it again.

“You’ve been cast in the lowrent Ukrainian sequel,” he told the two witnesses.

There wasn’t much argument over the facts, which were captured in the rough transcript of the president’s call, dozens of text messages between his aides and Taylor’s detailed timeline, which he composed from notes that he had taken during the course of his duties.

Daniel Goldman, the Democrats’ counsel, focused on a methodical inquiry, sketching out the timeline under which Taylor and Kent learned about the pressure campaign to extract political favors from the Ukrainians in exchange for an Oval Office visit for Zelensky and $391 million of military aid.

Goldman asked Taylor to explain the meaning of specific words that Gordon Sondland, a Trump donor turned diplomat, used to outline terms of the deal for the Ukrainians and their American interlocut­ors.

“What did he mean by ‘everything’ “Goldman asked, referring to Sondland.

“The security assistance and the White House meeting,” Taylor replied.

Goldman summed up the testimony, “Whether it’s a quid pro quo, bribery, extortion, abuse of power of the office of the presidency, the fact of the matter ... is that security assistance and the White House meeting were not going to be provided unless Ukraine initiated these two investigat­ions that would benefit Donald Trump’s re-elections?”

“Is that what you understood the facts to be?” he asked.

“That was the implicatio­n,” Taylor replied. “That was certainly the implicatio­n.”

Stephen Castor, the Republican­s’ primary questioner, used his time with the two witnesses to explain Trump’s mind-set and cast the two longtime diplomats as unsympathe­tic and unresponsi­ve to Trump’s concerns as commander in chief.

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