McConnell says he doesn’t have votes to block witnesses
Democratic senators want Trump’s former security adviser to appear Mitch McConnell convened a meeting with Republican senators to discuss potential witnesses.
WASHINGTON— Republican leaders do not yet have the votes to block Democrats’ demand for more witnesses at U.S. President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell conceded to fellow GOP senators late Tuesday. It could be a major hurdle for Trump’s hopes to end the trial with a quick acquittal. Democrats are demanding several witnesses, especially John Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser who writes in a forthcoming book that Trump told him he wanted to withhold military aid from Ukraine until it helped with investigations into Democratic rival Joe Biden. That’s the crux of one major article of impeachment against the president.
McConnell gave the news to senators, according to a Republican familiar with a closeddoor meeting of GOP senators and granted anonymity to discuss it.
McConnell convened the meeting shortly after Trump’s legal team made its closing arguments in the trial.
There are still several days before any potential witness vote would be taken. A decision to call more witnesses would require 51 votes to pass. With a 53-47 majority, Republicans can only afford to lose three.
If senators agree they want more witnesses they would then have to vote again on which ones to call.
The news came as Trump’s legal team argued forcefully against the relevance of testimony from Bolton and concluded their defence as the Senate braced for debate on witnesses.
While scoffing at Bolton’s manuscript, Trump and the Republicans have resisted summoning Bolton to testify in person about what he saw and heard as security adviser.
Senate Republicans spent two days behind closed doors discussing ideas to satisfy those who want to hear more testimony without prolonging the proceedings — or jeopardizing the president’s expected acquittal.
Those lost steam, and Democrats showed no interest.
Chuck Schumer, the Senate’s top Democrat, called a proposal for senators to be shown the manuscript in private, keeping Bolton out of public testimony, “absurd.”
“We’re not bargaining with them. We want four witnesses, and four sets of documents, then the truth will come out,” Schumer said.
Senators are being warned that if they agree to call Bolton to testify or try to access his book manuscript, the White House will block him, beginning a weeks-long court battle over executive privilege and national security. That had seemed to leave the few senators, including Sen. Mitt Romney, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski, who have expressed a desire to hear new testimony without strong backing.
Other Republicans want reciprocity — bring in Bolton or another Democratic witness in exchange for one from the GOP side. Some Republicans want to hear from Biden and his son Hunter.
The legal team also delved into areas that Democrats see as outside the scope of impeachment, chastising former FBI director James Comey and seizing on surveillance errors the FBI has acknowledged making in its Russian election interference probe.
Trump’s attorneys argued that the Founding Fathers took care to make sure that impeachment was narrowly defined, with offences clearly enumerated.
“The bar for impeachment cannot be set this low,” Trump attorney Jay Sekulow said. “Danger. Danger. Danger. These articles must be rejected. The constitution requires it. Justice demands it.”
Before consideration of witnesses, the case now moves toward written questions, with senators on both sides getting 16 hours to pose queries. By late in the week, they are expected to hold a vote on hearing from witnesses.