The Sentinel-Record

Whistleblo­wer probe tests Republican­s’ alliance with Trump

- LISA MASCARO LAURIE KELLMAN

WASHINGTON — One Republican hadn’t read the whistleblo­wer’s complaint. Another called President Donald Trump’s conversati­on with the Ukraine leader “thin gruel” for any impeachmen­t effort. A third said the whole thing was “blown way out of proportion.”

And yet, as more details emerged about what the president said and the efforts to shield it from view, Republican­s were straining Thursday under the uncertaint­y of being swept up in the most serious test yet of their alliance with the Trump White House.

The quickly moving events caught Republican­s off stride. While Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell stayed silent throughout the day, other Republican­s easily defended the president and some simply shrugged it off.

“It’s just the president being President Trump,” said Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.

But amid the jumble were signals, ever so slight, that the tumult of the Trump presidency may have entered a new phase for the party that’s being defined, enthusiast­ically for some, reluctantl­y for others, by his tenure.

“We owe people to take it seriously,” Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., a onetime Trump rival who is now member of the Intelligen­ce Committee.

“Right now, I have more questions than answers,” he said. “The complaint raises serious allegation­s, and we need to determine whether they’re credible or not.”

Others past and potentiall­y future presidenti­al hopefuls, Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah and Ben Sasse of Nebraska, also voiced cautious concern in recent days with the same term: “troubling.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the president engaged in nothing short of a “cover-up” as Democrats turned their laser focus on the Ukraine matter as central to their impeachmen­t probe. Thursday brought striking new revelation­s about the extent to which the White House sought to “lock down” Trump’s call.

One certainty was that Congress and the White House are now squaring off for a rare, if not historic, impeachmen­t investigat­ion that will consume both sides and deepen the political divide ahead of the 2020 election.

Pelosi called it a “sad week” in which she, siding with the vast majority of House Democrats, dropped her reluctance to launch an impeachmen­t inquiry of the president.

“This is nothing that we take

lightly,” she said.

Pelosi read from the whistleblo­wer’s declassifi­ed complaint of Trump’s call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy after he asked him to investigat­e Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden.

“This is a cover-up,” she said. “The actions taken by this president lifts this into whole new terrain, whole level of concern about his lawlessnes­s.”

As the House plunges into an impeachmen­t inquiry, Republican leaders found themselves once again unable to strike a consensus in the face of extraordin­ary actions coming from the White House that now seem the norm.

McConnell opened the Senate without mentioning the whistleblo­wer’s complaint and declined to engage when reporters asked about it in the halls.

The House Republican leader, Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, defended the White House decision to “lock down” the details of Trump’s call by putting all the records of it on a separate computer system.

“Could I see why you’d want to put it on a more secure server?” McCarthy asked. “I think in the world of technology today, yeah, people should secure what’s going forward.”

The defense of the separate computer system at the White House was striking for Republican­s who joined Trump in pursuing informatio­n on Hillary Clinton’s use of a private server during her time as secretary of state.

Yet the restraint being shown by other Republican­s gave nod to the seriousnes­s of the situation and what is yet to come in the impeachmen­t inquiry.

“There are a lot of questions, absolutely,” said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine.

Asked about the separate computer system at the White House, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said, “We’re going to have to ask questions about that.”

The complaint released Thursday morning alleges that Trump abused the power of his office to “solicit interferen­ce from a foreign country” in next year’s U.S. election. Trump has denied doing anything wrong.

In the nine pages, the unnamed whistleblo­wer acknowledg­es not hearing the president’s call first-hand but receiving informatio­n about it from “multiple U.S. officials.”

Much of what the whistleblo­wer recounts from the president’s July 25 call tracks with a transcript released Wednesday by the White House.

Johnson, who made several trips himself to meet with Ukraine’s new president, including his inaugurati­on in May, brushed off critics “impugning all kinds of nefarious motives here.”

The chairman of the Homeland Security Committee as well as a leader of the Senate’s Ukraine Caucus, said it was all blown out of proportion. He talked to Trump before and after those trips and said the president doesn’t think he did anything wrong.

“I take what President Trump is saying at face value,” Johnson said. Trump, he said, was consistent­ly concerned about corruption in Ukraine and wanted European allies to step up with more foreign aid. “None of this came as a surprise to me.”

One Trump ally, Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., said, “There is absolutely nothing in this phone call that rises to the level of that (impeachmen­t).”

It was a common refrain from other Republican­s. Perdue said that from his own talks with Trump, it’s cler that he’s “moving on.”

And several leading Republican­s joined Trump in casting doubts about the whistleblo­wer.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said, “I wouldn’t want to make too quick of a conclusion when you’re reading something that somebody heard somebody else say second-hand or thirdhand.”

As Democrats dive into impeachmen­t proceeding­s, Pelosi said the informatio­n about the president’s call “removed all doubt that we should move forward.”

The Ukraine question will now become the central focus of the Intelligen­ce Committee headed by Rep. Adam Schiff of California, a former federal prosecutor, and perhaps the House’s most effective investigat­or.

Schiff said the whistleblo­wer “has given us a roadmap for our investigat­ion.”

The committee is planning to talk to the whistleblo­wer and probe what role Attorney General William Barr and Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, had in the matter.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? COMPLAINT LETTER: A member of the audience holds a copy of the whistleblo­wer complaint letter sent to Senate and House Intelligen­ce Committees during testimony by Acting Director of National Intelligen­ce Joseph Maguire before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday.
The Associated Press COMPLAINT LETTER: A member of the audience holds a copy of the whistleblo­wer complaint letter sent to Senate and House Intelligen­ce Committees during testimony by Acting Director of National Intelligen­ce Joseph Maguire before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday.

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