The Phnom Penh Post

Second Trump whistleblo­wer comes forward

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A SECOND whistleblo­wer has come forward, this one with first-hand informatio­n about events that tr iggered an impeachmen­t investigat­ion into US President Donald Trump for alleged abuse of power, the informant’s lawyer said on Sunday.

“I can confirm this report of a second #whistleblo­wer being represente­d by our legal team,” Mark Zaid said on Twitter. “They also made a protected disclosure under the law and cannot be retaliated against. This WBer has first-hand knowledge.”

Zaid’s co-counsel, Andrew Bakaj, said earlier that his firm and team “represent multiple whistleblo­wers” in the case accusing Trump of using the powers of his office to pressure Ukrainian PresidentV­olodymyr Zelensky to investigat­e political rival Joe Biden and his son Hunter.

With the crisis seeming to deepen by the day, it was unclear whether Bakaj was using “multiple” to refer to more than two whistleblo­wers. Typically, several officials would listen in on a call between the president and a foreign leader.

The existence of a whistleblo­wer claiming first-hand knowledge would make it harder for the president and his supporters to dismiss the original complaint as hearsay, as they have repeatedly done.

Trump pushed back at the allegation­s in tweets on Sunday, but did not mention the second whistleblo­wer.

He repeated his assertions that Hunter Biden had been “handed $100,000 a month from a Ukrainian based company, even though he had no experience in energy . . . and separately got $1.5 billion from China despite no experience and for no apparent reason”.

Media reports have said Hunter Biden was paid up to $50,000 a month as a member of the board of a Ukrainian gas company, Burisma.

Trump tweeted that “as president I have an obligation to end CORRUPTION, even if that means requesting the help of a foreign country or countries. It is done all the time”.

In a back-and-forth on Twitter, Joe Biden soon responded: “In my experience, asking a foreign government to manufactur­e lies about your domestic political opponent is not ‘done all the time’.”

Trump also said that Joe Biden, for months the leading candidate for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination in 2020, should “hang it up”.

No evidence has been found that either Biden did anything illegal.

In perhaps his strongest response yet, Joe Biden wrote in the Washington Post that Trump was “franticall­y pushing flat-out lies, debunked conspiracy theories and smears against me and my family, no doubt hoping to undermine my candidacy”.

“It won’t work, because the American people know me – and they know him,” Biden said in an op-ed article.

A bit unusually, Trump stayed in the White House on Sunday rather than travelling.

No administra­tion officials appeared on the Sunday television programmes despite the critical nature of the moment.

But one Republican senator, Ron Johnson, told NBC’s Meet the Press that Trump, in a conversati­on, had sharply rejected allegation­s he linked military aid for Ukraine to any effort to find dirt on the Bidens.

“When I asked the president about that,” said Johnson, who serves on the Foreign Relations Committee, “he completely a d a ma n t l y, v e h e me n t l y, angrily denied it.”

 ?? AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP ?? An Iraqi protester waves the national flag during a demonstrat­ion in Baghdad on Sunday.
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP An Iraqi protester waves the national flag during a demonstrat­ion in Baghdad on Sunday.

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