Millennium Post

Pivotal impeachmen­t week Key vote in Italy as Salvini seeks to topple government resumes; Dems seek witnesses

The articles of impeachmen­t charge Trump with abuse of power and obstructio­n of Cong

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WASHINGTON DC: President Donald Trump's impeachmen­t trial enters a pivotal week as his defense team resumes its case and senators face a critical vote on whether to hear witnesses or proceed directly to a vote that is widely expected to end in his acquittal.

The articles of impeachmen­t charge Trump with abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress.

Those decisions on witnesses may be complicate­d by reports that Trump said he wanted to maintain a freeze on military assistance to Ukraine until it aided political investigat­ions into his Democratic rivals.

That's from former national security adviser John Bolton in a draft of his forthcomin­g book.

The report by The New York Times was later confirmed by The Associated Press. The revelation challenges the defense offered up by Trump and his attorneys in his impeachmen­t trial.

The Capitol Hill maneuverin­g will be complement­ed by high-stakes efforts on both sides of the aisle to claim political advantage from the proceeding­s as the presidenti­al nominating season kicks off in

In this image from video, personal attorney to President Donald Trump, Jay Sekulow, hold a copy of the Mueller Report as speaks during the impeachmen­t trial against Trump in the Senate in Washington PIC/PTI

Iowa on February 3.

After a two-hour opening argument Saturday, Trump's defense team will lay out its case in depth beginning Monday.

White House counsel Pat Cipollone said Trump's lawyers don't expect to take the full 24 hours allotted to them, but there will be arguments from some familiar faces.

Harvard law professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz, former independen­t counsel Ken Starr and former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi will speak on specific topics.

Dershowitz said Sunday he would argue that the charges against Trump are too

minor to warrant the Republican president's removal from office under the Constituti­on. Even if true, they did not allege impeachabl­e offenses," Dershowitz told "Fox News Sunday."

The Trump team has also teased the notion that it would draw attention to Joe Biden and his son Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukraine gas company Burisma, while the elder Biden was vice president.

An extended focus on Joe Biden, one of the leading Democratic presidenti­al contenders, could mean blowback from even some of the GOP members of the Senate.

Once Trump's team concludes, senators will have 16 hours to ask questions of both the House impeachmen­t prosecutor­s and the president's legal team. Their questions must be in writing.

Chief Justice John Roberts will read the questions aloud.

He is expected to alternate between both sides of the aisle. Many senators have been talking copious notes throughout the trial in preparatio­n for the question-and-answer time.

Sen. John Barrasso, R-wyo., told reporters Saturday that Republican­s expected to get together on Monday to start formulatin­g a list of questions.

We will meet as a conference and decide what questions we want to pose, what the order may be of those of those questions, he said.

Under the Senate rules passed last week, senators will get another chance to vote whether to consider new witnesses and evidence after the Q&A time is elapsed.

Four Republican­s would have to break ranks to join Democrats in the Gop-controlled Senate to extend the trial for an undetermin­ed amount of time.

If that happens, expect a bitter fight over which witnesses might be called and which documents might be subpoenaed.

Democrats have called for testimony from Trump's former national security adviser, John Bolton, and his acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney.

An attempt to call either probably would lead to a showdown with the White House, which claims both men have absolute immunity" from being called to testify before the Senate, even in an impeachmen­t trial.

Still, Bolton has said he would appear if issued a subpoena by the Senate.

While Republican­s have hoped for a speedy trial, Trump has called for the testimony of the Bidens and the intelligen­ce community whistleblo­wer whose summer complaint about Trump's July telephone call with Ukraine's

leader instigated the impeachmen­t inquiry.

But some Republican­s, including Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., have expressed resistance to calling those witnesses.

If the vote fails, the Senate could move swiftly to its vote on whether to remove or acquit Trump, giving the president the result he's been looking for as soon as the end of the week.

BOLOGNA (ITALY): Italians voted Sunday in a key regional election which the far-right hopes will shake the country's fragile coalition government to its core and return strongman Matteo Salvini to power.

The wealthy centre-north region of Emilia Romagna has been a stronghold of the Italian left for over 70 years, but while left-wing values still hold sway in its cities, the right has been rallying serious support in towns and the countrysid­e.

The last polls published before the pre-election media blackout showed the anti-immigrant League neck-and-neck with the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), which governs Italy in coalition with the anti-establishm­ent Five Star Movement (M5S).

Some 3.5 million citizens are eligible to cast ballots to elect the region's president between 7:00 am (0600 GMT) and 11:00 pm, alongside similar regional elections in the smaller southern region of Calabria.

Turnout in Emilia Romagna was high at 7:00 pm, at over 59 percent, almost double the 31 percent registered at the same time during the last regional elections.

The League is hoping for a repeat of its historic win in October in Umbria, which had been a left-wing fiefdom for 50 years.

Its candidate in Emilia Romagna, Lucia Borgonzoni, 43, has been overshadow­ed by Salvini, who has held daily rallies and inundated social media with snaps of him sampling delicacies in the Parma ham and Parmesan cheese heartland.

Salvini infuriated the left Saturday when he broke the pre-election silence -- which under Italian law means candidates cannot campaign the day before a vote -- by tweeting about the "eviction notice" he was set to deliver to the government.

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