Hartford Courant (Sunday)

For Trump, inquiry is a threat like no other

- By Julie Pace and Zeke Miller Associated Press

WASHINGTON — From the moment Donald Trump became a national political figure, he has been shadowed by investigat­ions and controvers­y.

They have been layered, lengthy and often inconclusi­ve, leaving many Americans scandal-weary and numb to his behavior. And with each charge against him, Trump has perfected the art of deflection, seemingly gaining strength by bullying and belittling those who have dared to take him on.

Now Trump is facing a high-velocity threat like none he’s confronted before.

It has rapidly evolved from a

process fight over a whistleblo­wer complaint to an impeachmen­t inquiry within two weeks. Much of the evidence is already in public view. A rough transcript of a July 25 phone call in which Trump asks Ukraine’s president to help investigat­e Democratic rival Joe Biden. The whistleblo­wer’s detailed letter alleging the White House tried to cover up the call, and possibly others.

Unlike special counsel Robert Mueller’s two-year investigat­ion, which circled an array of people in Trump’s orbit but not always the president himself, Trump doesn’t have the benefit of distance. His words and his actions are at the center of this investigat­ion.

“The Mueller report, it was always Manafort this and his son that. There was a cascade of players,” said presidenti­al historian Douglas Brinkley, referring to former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and Donald Trump Jr. “This was just Donald Trump and a disturbing conversati­on with another world leader.”

So, suddenly, Washington is different and the history of Trump’s presidency has changed. By year’s end, he could become only the third American president impeached by the House of Representa­tives.

That new reality caught Trump and his advisers off guard, according to people close to the president. If anything, they thought the specter of impeachmen­t had been lifted after the Mueller investigat­ion ended without a clear determinat­ion that Trump had committed a crime.

The contours of that investigat­ion played to Trump’s strengths. Mueller spent two years in silence, allowing the president to fill the vacuum with assertions that the investigat­ion was a “hoax” and a “witch hunt.” The details of the investigat­ion that did leak out were often complicate­d and focused on people in Trump’s sphere. Even Mueller’s pointed statement that he had not exonerated Trump did not seem to stick. There was ultimately plenty of smoke, but no smoking gun.

Numerous other Democratic inquiries appeared likely to meet a similar fate, including House investigat­ion into Trump’s business dealings, his tax returns and a variety of administra­tion scandals. For many Americans, they were one big blur of investigat­ions without any clarity of purpose.

Then the whistleblo­wer gave the Democrats what they needed: a simple, easily explainabl­e charge — that the president sought a foreign government’s help for personal political gain — and his words to back it up.

For House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and several Democratic moderates who had resisted calls for impeachmen­t, the calculus shifted. It was now more of a risk to recoil from impeachmen­t than charge ahead.

“What we’re seeing right now is a completely different moment in the history of this country,” said Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, D-Fla.

One thing that didn’t change — at least not immediatel­y — was the clear partisan divide over Trump’s actions, both in Washington and across the country.

According to a one-day NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll conducted Wednesday, 49% of Americans approve of the House formally starting an impeachmen­t inquiry into Trump. Among Democrats, 88% approve of the investigat­ion, while 93% of Republican­s disapprove.

Mike Staffieri, a retiree and Republican who lives just outside of Richmond, Virginia, said Democrats were trying to “throw enough poop at the wall and hope something sticks.”

On Capitol Hill, some Trump allies concurred, confidentl­y dismissing the impeachmen­t inquiry as just another partisan effort to take down a president who is despised by many Democrats. That rough transcript of a phone call in which Trump presses U k ra i n e ’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, to work with Attorney General William Barr and personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani on an investigat­ion into Biden? It’s just Trump being Trump, according to his backers.

“You’ve heard President Trump talk. That’s President Trump,” said Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? By year’s end, Donald Trump could become the third American president impeached by the House of Representa­tives.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP By year’s end, Donald Trump could become the third American president impeached by the House of Representa­tives.

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