The Peterborough Examiner

Impeachmen­t takeaways: History lessons, partisan feuds

- ERIC TUCKER AND MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — The next phase of the impeachmen­t inquiry of U.S. President Donald Trump moved to the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday with public hearings featuring professors of law who discussed the constituti­onal origins of Congress’s impeachmen­t power.

Three of the lawyers were chosen by Democrats, one by Republican­s, and the experts split much like the committee, along partisan lines, over whether Trump committed an impeachabl­e offence when he asked the president of Ukraine to investigat­e his political rival Joe Biden.

The lofty arguments about the Constituti­on were frequently interrupte­d by partisan sniping among committee members. Here are some takeaways from the hearing so far:

Republican disruption

Republican­s allied with the president used the hearing to force procedural votes and delay the proceeding­s, adding to an unruly atmosphere even with the professors’ lofty recounting of constituti­onal principles.

GOP members interrupte­d House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler and the expert witnesses, calling for more Republican witnesses, a delay of the hearing and for House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff to be called as a witness. Schiff led the investigat­ion into Trump’s dealings with Ukraine.

The top Republican on the Judiciary panel, Georgia Rep. Doug Collins, said the impeachmen­t process is a “sham.” And he said the committee had been sidelined as other panels led the impeachmen­t investigat­ion.

“What a disgrace to this committee, to have the committee of impeachmen­t simply take from other committees and rubber stamp,” Collins said.

Collins also criticized the quick pace of the impeachmen­t probe. Democrats hope to hold a final vote by Christmas.

“If you want to know what’s really driving this, there are two things — a clock and a calendar,” Collins said.

High crimes and misdemeano­urs

The four law professors who testified brought history lessons to the hearing, with talk of American founding fathers and British monarchs, of the 18th century constituti­onal Convention and 20th century impeachmen­t proceeding­s of presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton.

Their testimony had a contempora­ry purpose, too, as Democrats look to bolster the argument for impeachmen­t by having outside constituti­onal experts make the case that Trump committed an impeachabl­e offence.

Three of the witnesses made clear that they thought Trump’s conduct met the definition of an abuse of power that the constituti­onal framers had in mind for removal of a commander in chief. They said the president’s interactio­n with Ukraine amounted to high crimes and misdemeano­urs, the impeachmen­t standard set out in the Constituti­on.

“If what we’re talking about is not impeachabl­e,” said Michael Gerhardt, a University of North Carolina law professor, “then nothing is impeachabl­e.”

Pamela Karlan, a Stanford Law School professor, said the founding fathers were particular­ly concerned about foreign interferen­ce in American politics. “The very idea that a president might seek the aid of a foreign government in his reelection campaign would have horrified them,” Karlan said.

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