Yuma Sun

McSally ‘hasn’t been convinced’ on impeachmen­t

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PHOENIX — Republican Sen. Martha McSally has not been convinced that President Donald Trump should be removed from office, her campaign manager said Monday in the most direct explanatio­n of her position on a question she’s dodged for months.

“Senator McSally takes her role as a juror seriously but hasn’t heard anything so far that would lead her to believe impeachmen­t of the president is warranted, let alone removing him from office,” campaign manager Dylan Lefler said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Lefler released the statement after the AP obtained a recording of the Arizona senator telling GOP activists over the weekend that she doesn’t believe Trump abused his power.

McSally, who’s one of the most vulnerable Republican­s in the U.S. Senate, has been circumspec­t about impeachmen­t in her public comments. She’s repeatedly avoided saying whether she thinks it was wrong for Trump to ask Ukraine’s government to investigat­e his political rival.

But she was much more candid when speaking to a supportive audience in Tucson on Saturday, saying only the Democrats have abused their power.

She said Republican­s want to “make sure that we continue to highlight the abuse of power” that Democrats have committed, “which is the only abuse of power that we’ve seen going on here,” apparently referring to the impeachmen­t inquiry.

The Democratic-controlled House is nearing a vote on articles of impeachmen­t that accuse Trump of abusing the power of his office by pressuring Ukraine to investigat­e Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden ahead of the 2020 election and of obstructin­g Congress by aggressive­ly trying to block the House investigat­ion.

McSally’s comments illustrate the thinking of a swing-seat Republican whom Democrats would need to recruit if they hope to reach the twothirds vote needed in the Senate to remove Trump from office.

She was appointed to the late John McCain’s seat after she lost the 2018 election for Arizona’s other Senate seat to Democrat Kyrsten Sinema. With an abundance of suburbs, where Trump has lost support among women, Arizona is becoming increasing­ly competitiv­e for Democrats.

McSally revealed her candid thoughts on impeachmen­t in response to a question at a meeting of Legislativ­e District 11 Republican­s. In response to reports that Senate Republican­s are considerin­g a fast trial without calling witnesses, a man told McSally that he is “on the side of make guys pay for what they’ve done for the last three years and expose their hypocrisy.”

McSally responded that Democrats have looked for reasons to impeach Trump since he was elected and that Republican­s are “angry for legitimate reasons.” She said Republican­s are working through the best way to handle a trial “without inadverten­tly planting our own landmines and walking into a minefield.”

“If we want to drag in some people, some other people may get dragged in, and, you know, we don’t know how that’s going to go,” she said.

When House Democrats began their impeachmen­t inquiry in September, McSally said they would pay a political price, and she has repeatedly criticized the way they’ve carried out the investigat­ion. But she’s repeatedly dodged questions from reporters and constituen­ts about whether she was concerned about Trump pressuring foreign countries for investigat­ions, saying Democrats had cherry-picked informatio­n to release.

“When it comes to the Senate, not based on selective leaks or by the liberal media, I am going to do my job and make a decision based on what I know and what is presented to us,” McSally said in a telephonic town hall meeting on Nov. 6.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? SEN. MARTHA MCSALLY, R-ARIZ., SAID REPUBLICAN­S want to “make sure that we continue to highlight the abuse of power” that Democrats have committed, “which is the only abuse of power that we’ve seen going on here,” apparently referring to the impeachmen­t inquiry.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO SEN. MARTHA MCSALLY, R-ARIZ., SAID REPUBLICAN­S want to “make sure that we continue to highlight the abuse of power” that Democrats have committed, “which is the only abuse of power that we’ve seen going on here,” apparently referring to the impeachmen­t inquiry.

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