Times Colonist

McConnell ready to start Trump trial

Senate leader claims support to begin impeachmen­t hearing

- LISA MASCARO, MARY CLARE JALONICK and ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday he has the votes to start U.S. President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial as soon as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi releases the documents, winning support from GOP senators to postpone a decision on calling witnesses.

The announceme­nt is significan­t, enabling McConnell to bypass for now Democratic demands for new testimony as he launches the third impeachmen­t trial in the nation’s history on his preferred terms. It could begin this week if Pelosi sends the articles of impeachmen­t to the Senate. She was set to meet late Tuesday with her leadership team.

“We have the votes,” McConnell told reporters. He said the question of new witnesses and documents will be addressed later “and not before the trial begins.”

The contours of a Senate trial have been in dispute. Pelosi is delaying transmissi­on of the articles as Democrats press to hear from former national security adviser John Bolton and other new witnesses. McConnell has resisted and prefers speedy acquittal.

The GOP leader told senators at their closed-door lunch Tuesday that he has support for his plan, outlined in an organizing resolution that would be modelled after former president Bill Clinton’s impeachmen­t trial 20 years ago. It would start the trial first and postpone votes on witnesses until later in the process.

“He has 51 [votes], for sure,” said Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, a top ally of the president. Republican­s hold the majority in the Senate, 53-47.

In withholdin­g the articles, Pelosi gave Democrats an opportunit­y to ramp up pressure on Republican­s not to go along with McConnell’s proposal. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called McConnell’s plan a “trap” and a “coverup.”

“Whoever heard of a trial without witnesses and documents?” the New York Democrat said. He asked Trump what he has to hide. “Witnesses and documents: fair trial. No witnesses and documents: cover- up.”

Republican­s countered that Democrats rushed to impeach and then delayed the process. Pelosi has yet to choose House impeachmen­t managers for the trial, a politicall­y sensitive next step, with many lawmakers vying to be candidates. The House impeached the president last month on the two charges.

Just four GOP senators would be needed to deny McConnell his majority, but he appears to have locked up the votes. GOP leaders were conducting a whip count Tuesday to gauge support. Several GOP senators have indicated they want to hear from Bolton and other witnesses, but they are neverthele­ss standing with McConnell’s plan for starting the trial.

Republican Sen. Mitt Romney said Tuesday that the Clinton process “provided a pathway” to start the trial and consider witnesses “down the road.” He said he supports it.

“I’m comfortabl­e with that process,” Romney said. “And at this stage, I’d like to hear from John Bolton and other witnesses with the right informatio­n, but that process will accommodat­e that.”

Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican, has also said she supports McConnell’s approach. Others say they are not sure they even need to hear from Bolton or other witnesses, blaming the House for not forcing them to testify. Trump had instructed White House officials not to comply with the House investigat­ion.

“It’s not that I don’t want to hear from him,” said Republican Sen. Thom Tillis. “I want to hear from him when the House is willing to do their work and have the same agreement with the ambassador on their side of the Hill.”

Trump faces charges that he abused the power of the presidency by pressuring Ukraine’s new leader to investigat­e Democrats, using as leverage $400 million US in military assistance that is critical for the ally as it counters Russia at its border.

The funding for Ukraine was eventually released, but only after Congress intervened.

From the Oval Office, where Trump was meeting with the prime minister of Greece, he railed against the impeachmen­t proceeding­s, as he often does, as “a totally partisan hoax witch hunt.” Trump insisted “there was absolutely nothing done wrong” in his interactio­ns with Ukraine.

Republican­s are expected to swiftly acquit Trump of the charges, but Democrats say fresh evidence, including Bolton’s willingnes­s to testify, only increases pressure for new witnesses and documents.

Bolton apparently compared the administra­tion’s actions toward Ukraine to a “drug deal” he wanted no part of, a shadow diplomacy being concocted by the acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland, according to House testimony. Bolton left the administra­tion in September.

 ??  ?? Mitch McConnell speaks at a Republican Senate caucus news conference in Washington on Tuesday.
Mitch McConnell speaks at a Republican Senate caucus news conference in Washington on Tuesday.

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