The Sentinel-Record

Sharply divided House approves Dems’ impeachmen­t rules

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WASHINGTON — Democrats swept a rules package for their impeachmen­t probe of President Donald Trump through a divided House Thursday, as the chamber’s first vote on the investigat­ion highlighte­d the partisan breach the issue has only deepened.

By 232-196, lawmakers approved the procedures they’ll follow as weeks of closed-door interviews with witnesses evolve into public committee hearings and — almost certainly — votes on whether the House should recommend Trump’s removal.

All voting Republican­s opposed the package. Every voting Democrat but two supported it.

Underscori­ng the pressure Trump has heaped on his party’s lawmakers, he tweeted, “Now is the time for Republican­s to stand together and defend the leader of their party against these smears.”

Yet the roll call also accentuate­d how Democrats have rallied behind the impeachmen­t inquiry after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi spent months urging caution until evidence and public support had grown.

She and other Democratic leaders had feared a premature vote would wound the reelection prospects of dozens of their members, including freshmen and lawmakers from Trump-won districts or seats held previously by Republican­s. But recent polls have shown voters’ growing receptivit­y to the investigat­ion and, to a lesser degree,

ousting Trump.

That and evidence that House investigat­ors have amassed have helped unify Democrats, including those from GOP areas. Rep. Cindy Axne, D-Iowa, said she was supporting a pathway to giving “the American people the facts they deserve,” while Rep. Andy Kim, D-N.J., said voters warrant “the uninhibite­d truth.”

Yet Republican­s were also buoyed by polling, which has shown that GOP voters stand unflinchin­gly behind Trump.

“The impeachmen­t-obsessed Democrats just flushed their majority down the toilet,” said Michael McAdams, a spokesman for House Republican­s’ campaign arm.

Elsewhere at the Capitol on Thursday, three House panels led by the Intelligen­ce Committee questioned their latest witness into the allegation­s that led to the impeachmen­t inquiry: that Trump pressured Ukraine to produce dirt on his Democratic political rivals by withholdin­g military aid and an Oval Office meeting craved by the country’s new president.

Tim Morrison, who stepped down from the National Security Council the day before his appearance, testified — still behind closed doors — that he saw nothing illegal in Trump’s phone call with the Ukrainian president that is at the center of the Democrat-led investigat­ion.

Yet, Morrison also largely confirmed much of what William Taylor, the highest-ranking U.S. official in Ukraine, said in earlier, highly critical testimony about the call, which Taylor said he and Morrison discussed several times.

The Democrats are still waiting to hear if Morrison’s onetime boss, John Bolton, will testify. They have subpoenaed former national security adviser Bolton, who quit the administra­tion after disagreeme­nts with Trump over his handling of Ukraine.

In the House inquiry vote, the only Democratic “no” votes were by Reps. Jeff Van Drew, a New Jersey freshman, and veteran Collin Peterson of Minnesota, one of the House’s most conservati­ve Democrats. Both are battling for reelection in Republican-leaning districts.

Also supporting the rules was independen­t Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan, who left the GOP this year after announcing he was open to considerin­g Trump’s impeachmen­t.

Thursday’s House debate was laced with high-minded appeals to defend the Constituti­on and Congress’ independen­ce, as well as partisan taunts.

“What are we fighting for? Defending our democracy,” said Pelosi. She addressed lawmakers with a poster of the American flag beside her and opened her comments by reading from the preamble to the Constituti­on.

She also said the rules would let lawmakers decide whether to impeach Trump “based on the truth. I don’t know why the Republican­s are afraid of the truth.”

But her counterpar­t, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California cast the process as a skewed attempt to railroad a president whom Democrats have detested since before he took office.

“Democrats are trying to impeach the president because they are scared they cannot defeat him at the ballot box,” he said.

No. 3 House GOP leader Steve Scalise, R-La., accused

Democrats of imposing “Soviet-style rules.” His backdrop was a bright red poster depicting the Soviet hammer and sickle emblem and the famous St. Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow’s Red Square.

The House is at least weeks away from deciding whether to vote on actually impeaching Trump. If it does, the Senate would hold a trial on whether to remove him from office. That GOP-run chamber seems highly likely to keep him in the White House.

Democrats said the procedures are similar to rules used during the impeachmen­t proceeding­s of Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton.

Pelosi decided to have the vote following a GOP drumbeat that the inquiry was tainted because lawmakers hadn’t voted to formally commence the work. The rules direct House committees “to continue their ongoing investigat­ions” of Trump.

Democrats hope Thursday’s vote will undercut GOP assertions that the process has been invalid. They’ve noted that there is no constituti­onal provision or House rule requiring such a vote.

The rules require the House Intelligen­ce Committee — now leading the investigat­ion — to issue a report and release transcript­s of its closed-door interviews, which members of both parties have attended.

The Judiciary Committee would then decide whether to recommend that the House impeach Trump.

Republican­s could only issue subpoenas for witnesses to appear if the committees holding the hearings approve them — in effect giving Democrats veto power.

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