The Mercury News

Are Democrats starting impeachmen­t, or not?

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WASHINGTON >> The messages coming from House Democrats on impeachmen­t in recent weeks are decidedly confusing.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said Democrats need to wait for court decisions before they decide whether to approve articles of impeachmen­t. At the same time, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, New York Rep. Jerrold Nadler, said Thursday that what his committee is doing now amounts to “formal impeachmen­t proceeding­s” — and that Democrats will make a final decision by the end of the year.

So are Democrats starting impeachmen­t, or not? And will President Donald Trump ultimately be removed from office? Sort of. And almost certainly not. Questions and answers about the impeachmen­t debate:

Q

First of all, what’s the status of impeachmen­t?

A

Talk of impeachmen­t has escalated in recent months after Trump began fighting subpoenas from Congress. Democrats had originally said they wanted to start by investigat­ing Trump and doing their own review of former special counsel Robert Mueller’s report. But that has proved to be impossible, because people Mueller interviewe­d have on Trump’s orders defied subpoenas. The House Judiciary Committee this week filed a lawsuit in federal court to force the testimony of one of the Mueller report’s key witnesses, former White House Counsel Donald McGahn. And last month the panel filed a petition to obtain secret grand jury testimony underlying the Mueller report. Both lawsuits made the argument that the committee needs to hear from witnesses and know more about Mueller’s findings to decide whether to recommend impeachmen­t to the full House.

Q

What does Pelosi say?

A

Pelosi’s tone has shifted somewhat in recent months. Mindful of moderates in her caucus who will need to win reelection next year, Pelosi said in March that Trump was “just not worth it” and “I’m not for impeachmen­t.” Since then, Mueller has released his report detailing Trump’s attempts to influence his investigat­ion and said he could not exonerate him. Pelosi says now that she wants to see the outcome of the court cases and get more informatio­n from the Trump administra­tion.

“If we have a case for impeachmen­t that’s the place we will have to go,” she said in July, while making it clear that she doesn’t believe the House has yet made that case.

Q

What does Nadler say?

A

Nadler, who represents ultraliber­al New York City, has become more outspoken on the need for impeachmen­t in recent weeks. At the end of July, he said he believes Trump “richly deserves” it. Those comments reflect the sentiments of most Judiciary Committee Democrats, who have been ahead of the rest of their caucus in pushing for impeachmen­t. Recently, Nadler and other Democrats on the committee have laid out a new strategy: saying that impeachmen­t proceeding­s have already started, with or without a formal vote to begin them. “This is formal impeachmen­t proceeding­s,” Nadler said on CNN Thursday evening, adding that he hoped by the end of the year that the panel would decide whether to vote to recommend articles.

Q

So what is the daylight between them?

A

Pelosi has an entire caucus to consider, and many of the more moderate members want to stay far away from impeachmen­t proceeding­s. The Democrats who sit on the Judiciary Committee — including some of the most liberal members of the House — have been ready to start the process for quite some time and have put pressure on the speaker. Still, lawmakers close to the matter say the two sides are essentiall­y saying the same thing — that they are doing the work of impeachmen­t and a final decision will be made later in the year. “I think we’re unified on this question,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., a member of the committee.

Q

How does the court case factor in?

A

The idea that the committee is already conducting impeachmen­t is also helpful to the Democratic lawsuit. Courts could give greater weight to the committee’s requests if lawmakers make a plausible case that the informatio­n is needed to exercise their Constituti­onal duty of impeachmen­t. “The Judiciary Committee is conducting an investigat­ion to understand the scope and extent of misconduct by President Trump, and that investigat­ion includes considerat­ion of whether the Judiciary Committee should exercise its Article I powers to recommend articles of impeachmen­t,” the case reads.

Q

Does the Democratic caucus support starting impeachmen­t?

A

About half of them do. According to an Associated Press tally, 119 House Democrats support calls for the beginning of an impeachmen­t inquiry — one more than half of the caucus. Not all of them would support an impeachmen­t vote at this point.

Those calls appear mostly symbolic, for now, as Nadler has declared the committee is already doing the work of impeachmen­t.

Q

So could Trump really be removed from office?

A

Extremely unlikely. Even if the full House were to approve charges against the president, it’s up to the Republican Senate to hold an impeachmen­t trial. A two-thirds vote in the Senate would be required to convict and remove Trump from office. That’s an outcome that Democrats acknowledg­e is improbable.

Q

What are the political considerat­ions?

A

Many Democrats are torn. They know impeachmen­t could be politicall­y treacherou­s and cost them some support from independen­t voters in the 2020 election. But they also believe that Trump has committed the “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” that the Constituti­on lays out and don’t want to set a precedent for inaction. Raskin, a former constituti­onal law professor, says the political worries are “not an illegitima­te concern,” but that there are others who worry that Trump will claim exoneratio­n if the committee doesn’t act. “None of this is clairvoyan­t,” Raskin said.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People watch as the motorcade with President Donald Trump passes by Friday as Trump heads to a fundraiser in Water Mill, N.Y. Trump was in the Hamptons to attend a pair of fundraiser­s before heading to his golf club in New Jersey for vacation. Democrats are pondering whether to try to impeach him.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People watch as the motorcade with President Donald Trump passes by Friday as Trump heads to a fundraiser in Water Mill, N.Y. Trump was in the Hamptons to attend a pair of fundraiser­s before heading to his golf club in New Jersey for vacation. Democrats are pondering whether to try to impeach him.

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