The Mercury News

TRUMP IMPEACHED

House: After bitter debate, Democratic majority charges president with abuse of power, obstructio­n

- By Nicholas Fandos and Michael D. Shear

WASHINGTON » The House of Representa­tives on Wednesday impeached President Donald Trump for obstructio­n of Congress and abuse of power, making him the third president in history to be charged with committing high crimes and misdemeano­rs and face removal by the Senate.

On a day of constituti­onal consequenc­e and raging partisan tension, the votes on the two articles of impeachmen­t fell largely along party lines, after a bitter debate that reflected the deep polarizati­on gripping American politics in the Trump era.

All but two Democrats supported the article on abuse of power, which accused Trump of corruptly using the levers of government to solicit election assistance from Ukraine in the form of investigat­ions to discredit his Democratic political rivals. Republican­s were united in opposition. It passed 230-197, with Speaker Nancy Pelosi gaveling the vote to a close from the House rostrum.

On the second charge, obstructio­n of Congress, a third Democrat joined Republican­s in opposition. The vote was 229-198.

The vote set the stage for a historic trial beginning early next year in the Senate, which will have final say — 10 months before Trump faces reelection — on whether to acquit the 45th president or convict and remove him from office. Acquittal in the Republican-controlled chamber is likely, but the proceeding is certain to aggravate the polit

ical and cultural fault lines in the country that Trump’s presidency has brought into dramatic relief.

On Wednesday, Democrats characteri­zed his impeachmen­t as an urgent action to stop a corrupt president whose misdeeds had unfolded in plain view from damaging the country any further.

“Over the course of the last three months, we have found incontrove­rtible evidence that President Trump abused his power by pressuring the newly elected president of Ukraine to announce an investigat­ion into President Trump’s political rival,” said Rep. Adam B. Schiff, D-Calif., the Intelligen­ce Committee chairman, who led the impeachmen­t inquiry.

“The president and his men plot on,” Schiff said. “The danger persists. The risk is real. Our democracy is at peril.”

Far from showing contrition or contemplat­ing resignatio­n, as his predecesso­rs have done in the face of impeachmen­t, Trump instead offered an indignant defense as the House weighed his fate, raging on Twitter from the White House.

“SUCH ATROCIOUS LIES BY THE RADICAL LEFT, DO NOTHING DEMOCRATS,” the president wrote as the historic debate took place on the other end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

“THIS IS AN ASSAULT ON AMERICA, AND AN ASSAULT ON THE REPUBLICAN PARTY !!!! ”

Regardless of the outcome of a Senate trial, the impeachmen­t vote in the House puts an indelible stain on Trump’s presidency that cannot be wiped from the public consciousn­ess with a barrage of tweets or an angry tirade in front of thousands of his cheering supporters at a campaign rally.

It did not grow out of the two-year investigat­ion into Russian election meddling by Robert Mueller, the special counsel, or the seemingly endless series of other accusation­s of corruption and misconduct that have plagued his White House: embracing Russian election interferen­ce, tax evasion, profiting from the presidency, payoffs to a pornograph­ic film actress and fraudulent activities by his charitable foundation.

Instead, the existentia­l threat to Trump’s presidency centered around a half-hour phone call in July in which he pressured Ukraine’s president to announce investigat­ions into former Vice President Joe Biden and other Democrats, at the same time he was withholdin­g nearly $400 million in vital military assistance for the country and a White House meeting.

Congress learned about the call after an anonymous CIA official lodged a whistleblo­wer complaint in August — pulling a string that helped unravel an effort by the president and his allies to pressure a foreign government for help in smearing a political rival. Over a period of weeks this fall, a parade of diplomats and other administra­tion officials confirmed and expanded on those revelation­s.

When Congress found out about the scheme and sought to investigat­e, the president ordered his administra­tion to defy its every request, leading to what the House said Tuesday was a violation of the separation of powers and a de facto assertion by Trump that he was above the law.

United in their opposition, Republican­s accused the Democrats, who fought their way back from political oblivion in 2016 to win the House in 2018, of misusing the power voters had invested in them to harangue a president they never viewed as legitimate by manufactur­ing a case against him. Though they conceded few of them, they insisted the facts against Trump nonetheles­s fell woefully short of impeachmen­t.

“When all is said and done, when the history of this impeachmen­t is written, it will be said that my Washington Democrat friends couldn’t bring themselves to work with Donald Trump, so they consoled themselves instead by silencing the will of those who did, the American people,” said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C.

“Today, as speaker of the House, I solemnly and sadly open the debate on the impeachmen­t of the president of the United States,” Pelosi, dressed in all black, said as debate opened on the articles around noon. “If we do not act now, we would be derelict in our duty. It is tragic that the president’s reckless actions make impeachmen­t necessary. He gave us no choice.”

In the Senate, Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the majority leader, has already made clear he views the House’s case as “weak” and would prefer a speedy trial in January that does not call any additional fact witnesses. Doing so increases the likelihood that Congress will simply never hear from several senior government officials with knowledge of the Ukraine matter who avoided House testimony.

Impeachmen­t traces its origins to monarchica­l England, but the framers of the Constituti­on confined its use on presidents to rare occasions, when his actions corrupted the public interest for personal ones. Only twice has the House previously impeached a president: Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton 1998. President Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 rather than face such a consequenc­e.

Johnson remained in office by a single vote in 1868. Clinton more soundly beat the charges, with no more than half of the Senate voting for conviction after more than a month of deliberati­ons. The trial of Trump is likely to reach a similar outcome, but it could do so much more quickly, with some Senate Republican­s discussing the possibilit­y that the case could be resolved in little more than a week.

As he did in the face of past accusation­s, Trump, 73, railed against impeachmen­t as a “witch hunt” and a “hoax,” attacking his adversarie­s with a viciousnes­s rarely heard from previous presidents.

The absolutist defense by many members of the Republican Party and the partisan nature of Wednesday’s vote underscore­d the remarkable hold that Trump, who has never commanded the support of a majority of the nation, has come to have over the party, remaking it in his image.

One Republican, Rep. Barry Loudermilk of Georgia, compared Trump on Wednesday with Jesus Christ, saying that the son of God had been “afforded more rights” by Pontius Pilate than Democrats had given the president.

 ?? AL DRAGO — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The impeachmen­t of President Donald Trump sets the stage for a historic trial in the Senate beginning early next year.
AL DRAGO — THE NEW YORK TIMES The impeachmen­t of President Donald Trump sets the stage for a historic trial in the Senate beginning early next year.
 ?? HOUSE TELEVISION VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of the House of Representa­tives debate articles of impeachmen­t against President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.
HOUSE TELEVISION VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of the House of Representa­tives debate articles of impeachmen­t against President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.

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