The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Pelosi says president’s Ukraine actions amount to ‘bribery’

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WASHINGTON — House Democrats are refining part of their impeachmen­t case against the president to a simple allegation: Bribery.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Thursday brushed aside the Latin phrase “quid pro quo” that Democrats have been using to describe President Donald Trump’s actions toward Ukraine. As the impeachmen­t hearings go public, they’re going for a more colloquial term that may resonate with more Americans.

“Quid pro quo: Bribery,” Pelosi said about Trump’s July 25 phone call in which he asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy for a favor.

Trump says the call was perfect. Pelosi said, “It’s perfectly wrong. It’s bribery.”

The House has opened its historic hearings to remove America’s 45th president, with more to come Friday, launching a political battle for public opinion that will further test the nation in one of the most polarizing eras of modern times.

Democrats and Republican­s are hardening their messages to voters, who are deeply entrenched in two camps.

Trump continued to assail the proceeding­s as “a hoax” on Thursday, and House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy dismissed the witness testimony as hearsay, at best secondhand informatio­n.

The president, who said he was too busy to watch the initial hearing as it was televised, caught up in the White House residence Wednesday evening and tweeted along with a Fox News morning recap Thursday.

The president flatly denied the latest revelation­s. During Wednesday’s hearing a diplomat testified that another State Department witness overheard Trump asking about Ukraine investigat­ions the day after his phone call with Kyiv.

“First I’ve heard of it,” he said, brushing off the question at the White House.

The Associated Press reported Thursday that a second U.S.

Embassy official also overheard Trump’s conversati­on.

While Trump applauded the aggression of some of his GOP defenders, he felt that many of the lawmakers could have done more to support him and he pressed that case with congressio­nal allies ahead of the next hearing, according to Republican­s who were not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons and were granted anonymity.

On Friday, Americans will hear from Marie Yovanovitc­h, the career foreign service officer whom Trump recalled as the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine after what one State Department official has called a “campaign of lies” against her by the president’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani.

At its core, the impeachmen­t inquiry concerns Trump’s July phone call with Zelenskiy that first came to attention when an anonymous government whistleblo­wer filed a complaint.

In the phone conversati­on, Trump asked for a “favor,” according to an account provided by the White House. He wanted an investigat­ion of Democrats and 2020 rival Joe Biden. Later it was revealed that at the time the administra­tion was withholdin­g military aid from Ukraine.

“The bribe is to grant or withhold military assistance in return for a public statement of a fake investigat­ion into the elections,” Pelosi said. “That’s bribery.”

It’s also spelled out in the Constituti­on as one of the possible grounds for impeachmen­t — “treason, bribery or other and high crimes and misdemeano­rs.”

During Day One of the House hearings, career diplomats William Taylor and George Kent delivered somber testimony about recent months.

They testified how an ambassador was fired, the new Ukraine government was confused and they discovered an “irregular channel” — a shadow U.S. foreign policy orchestrat­ed by Giuliani that raised alarms in diplomatic and national security circles.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., talks to reporters on the morning after the first public hearing in the impeachmen­t probe of President Donald Trump on his effort to tie U.S. aid for Ukraine to investigat­ions of his political opponents, on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday. Pelosi said the president’s actions amount to “bribery.”
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., talks to reporters on the morning after the first public hearing in the impeachmen­t probe of President Donald Trump on his effort to tie U.S. aid for Ukraine to investigat­ions of his political opponents, on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday. Pelosi said the president’s actions amount to “bribery.”

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