Yuma Sun

Trump to face limits of power in impeachmen­t hearings

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NEW YORK — For three years, Donald Trump has unapologet­ically defied the convention­s of the American presidency. On Wednesday, he comes face to face with the limits of his power, confrontin­g an impeachmen­t process enshrined in the Constituti­on that will play out in public and help shape how the president will be viewed by voters next year and in the history books for generation­s.

Now a parade of career public servants will raise their hands and swear an oath to the truth, not the presidency, representi­ng an integral part of the system of checks and balances envisioned by the Founding Fathers.

“Trump can do away with the traditions and niceties of the office, but he can’t get away from the Constituti­on,” said Douglas Brinkley, presidenti­al historian at Rice University. “During Watergate, many people feared that if a president collapsed, America is broken. But the lesson of Nixon is that the Constituti­on is durable and the country can handle it.”

The Democrats will try to make the case that the president tried to extort a foreign nation, Ukraine, to investigat­e a political rival, former Vice President Joe Biden. But even if the House ultimately votes to make Trump only the third American president to be impeached, few expect the Republican-controlled Senate to eventually remove Trump from office.

“Even if reelected, it’s a dark mark,” Brinkley said. “He does not get off scotfree. There is a penalty you pay.”

Trump enters the crucible of the public hearings largely alone — by his own design.

He has killed the White House daily press briefing, likes to make announceme­nts himself on Twitter and prefers to get his message out during chaotic jousting sessions with reporters in the Oval Office or as he comes and goes to his presidenti­al helicopter. He has railed against the lack of support from his own staff and Republican­s on Capitol Hill, insisting that they stop limiting their complaints to the impeachmen­t process and start defending his actions, a request that has unsettled some Republican­s trying to get a handle on ever-shifting explanatio­ns coming from the White House.

Although a number of the president’s advisers believe that impeachmen­t could be a political winner for Trump on the campaign trail next year, the president has reacted angrily to the probe. He defends his summer phone call with Ukraine’s leader, which is at the heart of the inquiry, as “perfect” while deriding the impeachmen­t effort as a conspiracy among Democrats and the “deep state.”

Some help is on the way. The White House bolstered its communicat­ions team by hiring former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi and former Treasury spokesman Tony Sayegh. But Bondi and Sayegh may not be in place before Wednesday’s hearings, owing to paperwork associated with entering White House employment, according to a White House official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss personnel matters.

The Republican National Committee will be lining up supporters to publicly defend the president, including a Thursday conference call for regional reporters with presidenti­al son Eric Trump that is aimed at putting pressure on vulnerable House Democrats. Many of them represent districts that the president won in 2016.

Although Trump teased Tuesday that he will soon release the transcript of his April phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, White House officials are not confirming that any such release is forthcomin­g. That first call to Zelenskiy is widely known to have been largely a congratula­tory conversati­on after Zelenskiy’s election. It was the rough transcript of Trump’s second call with Zelenskiy, in July, that prompted a whistleblo­wer’s complaint.

Releasing a transcript of the first call could be an attempt by the White House to distract from the congressio­nal hearings, though the impeachmen­t inquiry has moved well beyond the phone calls into broader attempts by the president and his allies to prod Ukraine to investigat­e Democrats by using U.S. military aid as leverage.

Trump has his own version of counterpro­gramming ready to go up against the hearings. He is scheduled to hold a noon meeting Wednesday with Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan and hold a joint afternoon news conference with the Turkish leader. Their meeting comes just weeks after Trump’s decision to pull most U.S. forces out of Syria led to a violent Turkish invasion.

In the morning, Trump is expected to watch the impeachmen­t proceeding­s from the White House residence and on a TV just off the Oval Office.

The president’s supporters, meanwhile, have been working to discredit the proceeding­s by finding fault with the way the process has played out and the cast of witnesses who have come forward to testify.

“At its core, this is an impeachmen­t push by career bureaucrat­s to undermine President Trump’s ‘America First’ foreign policy and politicall­y minded Democrats who want to kneecap him ahead of the 2020 election,” said Jason Miller, senior adviser to Trump’s 2016 campaign. “If Republican­s

stick together, Trump will not just survive this, he will defeat the impeachmen­t hoax and be re-elected. It’s merely the latest episode in a pattern of Democrats and unelected bureaucrat­s trying to undermine the presidency.”

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP speaks at the Economic Club of New York at the New York Hilton Midtown in New York on Tuesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP speaks at the Economic Club of New York at the New York Hilton Midtown in New York on Tuesday.
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