Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

GOP calls for Biden’s son to testify

Whistleblo­wer is also on its impeachmen­t hearing wish list

- By Colby Itkowitz

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s asked for their own impeachmen­t witnesses on Saturday, sending Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a list that includes former Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden and the anonymous whistleblo­wer who filed the initial complaint against President Donald Trump.

Also Saturday, Trump told reporters he’d release on Tuesday the transcript of an April call he made to congratula­te Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy after he won his election.

The impeachmen­t probe moves from closed-door deposition­s to open hearings this week, which Democrats hope will present a strong case to the American public that bolsters support for impeaching the president.

Republican­s and the president have complained that the Democrats’ inquiry is unfairly partisan. Schiff is likely to reject many, if not all, of the witnesses from the Republican­s’ wish list. When the Democrats deny them, the Republican­s will present that as evidence of a one-sided process.

“We expect that you will call each of the witnesses listed above to ensure that the Democrats’ ‘impeachmen­t inquiry’ treats the President with fairness, as promised by Speaker Pelosi,” wrote Rep. Devin Nunes of California, the ranking Republican on the Intelligen­ce Committee. “Your failure to fulfill Minority witness requests shall constitute evidence of your denial of fundamenta­l fairness and due process.”

Witnesses who testified out of public view have corroborat­ed the crux of the case against Trump — that he pressured Zelenskiy in a July phone call to investigat­e his political rivals — so the Democrats see no need for the whistleblo­wer, who heard the story secondhand, to testify. Three career State Department officials are returning this week for the public hearings.

The release of a transcript of Trump’s earlier call with

Zelenskiy ahead of the inquiry’s first public hearing seems unlikely to have a major impact, as witnesses have described that call as friendly and noncontrov­ersial, according to testimony transcript­s.

“We have another transcript coming up, which is very important,” Trump said before boarding Air Force One to attend a college football game in Alabama. “They asked for it and I will gladly give it. There has never been a president who has been so transparen­t.”

Republican­s want to publicly question witnesses who would divert the conversati­on away from questions about Trump’s behavior to allegation­s only tangential­ly related to the case, such as unfounded claims that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election and that the Bidens acted nefariousl­y in their dealings with Ukraine.

Schiff said in a statement that the committee would evaluate the Republican­s’ requests.

“This inquiry is not, and will not serve, however, as a vehicle to undertake the same sham investigat­ions into the Bidens or 2016 that the President pressed Ukraine to conduct for his personal political benefit, or to facilitate the President’s effort to threaten, intimidate, and retaliate against the whistleblo­wer who courageous­ly raised the initial alarm,” Schiff said.

In addition to Hunter Biden, the Republican­s said they also want to hear from Biden’s business partner, Devon Archer, who served with Biden on the board of Burisma, a Ukrainian natural gas company.

Nunes writes that both Biden and Archer’s time with Burisma “can assist the American public in understand­ing the nature and extent of Ukraine’s pervasive corruption, informatio­n that bears directly on President Trump’s longstandi­ng and deeply-held skepticism of the country.”

Biden’s work for Burisma is a central issue in the impeachmen­t inquiry into whether Trump abused his power by asking that Ukrainian leaders to investigat­e the Bidens at the same time that he was withholdin­g military aid from their country.

As vice president, Joe Biden pressured Ukraine to fire its top prosecutor, Viktor Shokin, because Biden and other Western officials said Shokin was not sufficient­ly pursuing corruption cases.

Previously, Burisma had been under investigat­ion by Ukrainian prosecutor­s, but by 2016 when Biden was pushing for Shokin to be fired, the investigat­ion into Burisma was dormant, according to former Ukrainian and U.S. officials.

There are other individual­s on the list who are linked to conspiracy theories that go beyond Biden and the whistleblo­wer. Two witnesses are related to Trump allies’ unfounded allegation that Democrats were getting dirt on Trump from Ukraine during the 2016 election.

They’ve asked for Nellie Ohr, a researcher for Fusion GPS, which commission­ed the Steele dossier linking Russia and Trump, as well as Alexandra Chalupa, a Ukrainian American who worked with the Democratic National Committee.

Nunes, in his request that the anonymous whistleblo­wer be asked to testify publicly, argued that Trump “should be afforded an opportunit­y to confront his accusers.” He also asked that all individual­s who provided informatio­n to the whistleblo­wer be compelled to appear.

 ?? TERESA KROEGER/GETTY ?? House Republican­s called Saturday for Hunter Biden and the whistleblo­wer to testify in the impeachmen­t probe.
TERESA KROEGER/GETTY House Republican­s called Saturday for Hunter Biden and the whistleblo­wer to testify in the impeachmen­t probe.

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