Millennium Post

Slovenia’s PM announces resignatio­n

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WASHINGTON DC: President Donald Trump Monday denied that he told his former national security advisor John Bolton that military aid to Ukraine was tied to Kiev investigat­ing his political rivals.

Trump's tweets came after The New York Times reported Sunday that Bolton alleges as much in a draft of his upcoming book.

"I never told John Bolton that the aid to Ukraine was tied to investigat­ions into Democrats, including the Bidens. In fact, he never complained about this at the time of his very public terminatio­n," Trump tweeted in the early hours of Monday.

"If John Bolton said this, it was only to sell a book." Citing Bolton's unpublishe­d manuscript, The Times wrote that Trump told Bolton he wanted to keep frozen USD 391 million in aid to Ukraine until Kiev officials helped with a probe into his Democratic rival Joe Biden.

Trump was impeached last month for abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress.

House of Representa­tives prosecutor­s have spent three days laying out a detailed case that Trump withheld military aid and a White House meeting to pressure his Ukrainian counterpar­t to open an investigat­ion into Biden and the former vice president's son Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukrainian

gas company.

Democrats quickly seized on the report to press demands that Bolton and other key people in the Trump administra­tion be called testify in Trump's impeachmen­t trial.

A key point of Trump's impeachmen­t defense has been that there was no quid-pro-quo.

Trump's team has maintained that the holdup in aid was separate from his requests for an investigat­ion into the Bidens. Bolton's reported assertion in the manuscript would undercut this.

The Democrats want key Trump administra­tion officials to testify -- including Bolton and acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney -- believing they know a lot about Trump's dealings with Ukraine. Bolton has said he is willing to testify if subpoenaed.

In response to The Times' report, the lead House manager in the trial, Adam

Schiff, tweeted that Trump had "blocked our request for Bolton's testimony."

"Now we see why: Bolton directly contradict­s the heart of the President's defense," Schiff wrote.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that Senate Repub

licans' refusal to hear Bolton or other witnesses and documents is "now even more indefensib­le."

"The choice is clear: our Constituti­on, or a cover-up," she said. Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer urged Senate Republican­s to call for witness testimony during the impeachmen­t trial.

But Republican­s, who hold a 53-47 edge, have shown little inclinatio­n to break ranks with a president who has a history of

lashing out ferociousl­y at his perceived enemies.

Sixty-seven senators, a two-thirds majority, are needed to remove Trump from office.

LJUBLJANA: Slovenian Prime Minister Marjan Sarec on Monday announced he would step down, calling for fresh elections, following his finance minister's resignatio­n from the minority government.

"With these members of parliament and this coalition I cannot fulfil the people's expectatio­ns," he told journalist­s.

"The most honest thing we could do now would be early elections... to ask people whether they trust me and they want me to continue to work," added Sarec, a former comedian who became prime minister in 2018.

The resignatio­n comes just after Finance Minister Andrej Bertoncelj announced he would quit and follows internal conflicts within the fivemember coalition.

In December, the coalition barely managed to appoint a new cohesion minister after the populist Slovenian National Party agreed to abstain from the vote.

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