The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Trump finds his strategy has limits

Real risks remain despite president’s bravado against impeachmen­t inquiry

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is confrontin­g the limits of his main impeachmen­t defense.

As the probe hits the onemonth mark, Trump and his aides have largely ignored the details of the Ukraine allegation­s against him. Instead, they’re loudly objecting to the House

Democrats’ investigat­ion process, using that as justificat­ion for ordering administra­tion officials not to cooperate and complainin­g about what they deem prejudicia­l, even unconstitu­tional, secrecy.

But as a neardaily drip of derogatory evidence emerges from closeddoor testimony on Capitol Hill, the White House assertion that the proceeding­s are unfair is proving to be a lessthanco­mpelling counter to the mounting threat to Trump’s presidency. Some senior officials have complied with congressio­nal subpoenas to assist House Democratic investigat­ors, defying White House orders.

Asked about criticism that the White House lacks a coordinate­d pushback effort and could do a better job delivering its message, spokeswoma­n Stephanie Grisham said, “It’s hard to message anything that’s going on behind closed doors and in secret.”

“It’s like you’re fighting a ghost, you’re fighting against the air. So we’re doing the best we can,” she said on Fox News.

It was a rare public admission from the White House that despite the president’s bravado, real risks remain.

White House officials, who have been treating unified Republican support for Trump as a given, have grown increasing­ly fearful of GOP defections in a House impeachmen­t vote and a potential Senate trial. While they do not believe

there will be enough votes to remove the president, as Democrats hope, the West Wing believes more must be done to shore up Republican support to avoid embarrassm­ent and genuine political peril.

Trump himself has been upset with his own top aides — including Grisham and acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney — for not sufficient­ly changing the story line. Instead he relies on his Twitter account and Q&A sessions with reporters to launch daily attacks on the probe. And while Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, has added to the smoke screen, much as he did during the Russia probe, the former New York City mayor has dramatical­ly scaled back his media appearance­s since several of his associates were arrested in connection with Ukraine.

Complainin­g privately and publicly that Democrats “stick together” better than the GOP, Trump has leaned on Republican congressio­nal allies to do more, according to White House officials and Republican­s close to the West Wing. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss private conversati­ons.

At first, Trump was angry that his surrogates failed to defend him effectivel­y. Those included House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who stumbled through a “60 Minutes” interview. Trump urged the GOP earlier this week to fight back, a lesson that was taken to heart by a group of conservati­ve Republican­s, including members of the Freedom Caucus, who stormed a Capitol Hill hearing room on Wednesday to disrupt testimony in the probe.

Trump allies cheered that maneuver, believing it showed that Republican­s throughout Washington were coming to grips with the severity of the situation.

But the GOP complaints still are largely about process and may have limited potency: Trump’s defenders are complainin­g that the interviews are being conducted in secret, which may soon change, and that Republican­s are not involved, though GOP members can ask questions right alongside the Democrats.

The contradict­ions are telling.

On Thursday, GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a top ally of Trump, introduced a resolution condemning the Democratic­controlled House for pursuing a “closed door, illegitima­te

impeachmen­t inquiry.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is a cosponsor of that measure.

But Graham also said he’s talked to Mulvaney about what seems to be a lackluster White House pushback.

During President Bill Clinton’s impeachmen­t, Graham said, “he had a team that was organized, had legal minds that could understand what was being said versus the legal proceeding­s in question. And they were on message every day.” Republican­s have been complainin­g for weeks that the Trump White House has no such defense system in place — partly a result of the inability to identify qualified talent but also Trump’s own qualms about projecting concern in the face of the investigat­ion.

“I think they’re working on getting a messaging team together,” Graham said.

Democrats reject Trump arguments that the House interview process is unfair, and White House officials privately acknowledg­e their legal objections may not win the day. But they believe it’s a political argument that will hold sway with the American people.

However, the White House strategy comes with an expiration date: In coming weeks, the closeddoor testimony will give way to

public hearings. Democrats are expected to call a narrow group of witnesses to testify that Trump encouraged Ukraine to conduct investigat­ions that could benefit him politicall­y in 2020 and to address whether those requests were tied to conditions for giving Ukraine military aid and a White House meeting.

Some Trump allies believe the White House can’t afford not to directly address what’s already been revealed. They note that as more Trump appointees offer disparagin­g informatio­n to Congress, and as it is corroborat­ed by official sources, the president will have increasing difficulty simply complainin­g he is the target of a new “witch hunt.”

The president continues to insist he has done nothing wrong, a contention that can be difficult to square with the testimony coming on a nearly daily bases from the other end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue.

Tuesday’s testimony by the top U.S. envoy to Ukraine, William Taylor, only raised the stakes as he gave House impeachmen­t investigat­ors a detailed roadmap of Trump’s efforts to squeeze that country’s leaders for damaging informatio­n about his Democratic political rivals. Taylor is expected to be a star witness at the Democrats’ planned public hearings.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., speaks about a resolution he says he will introduce condemning the Democratic­controlled House for pursuing a “closed door, illegitima­te impeachmen­t inquiry,” during a news conference Thursday at the Capitol in Washington.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., speaks about a resolution he says he will introduce condemning the Democratic­controlled House for pursuing a “closed door, illegitima­te impeachmen­t inquiry,” during a news conference Thursday at the Capitol in Washington.

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