San Antonio Express-News

Impeachmen­t case now in Senate’s hands

Republican­s eyeing ‘parity’ on calling witnesses

- By Elise Viebeck, Rachael Bade and Seung Min Kim

WASHINGTON — The House delivered two articles of impeachmen­t to the Senate on Wednesday, laying the groundwork for President Donald Trump’s trial.

Meanwhile, Senate Republican­s rallied behind the idea of parity between the two parties in possibly calling witnesses.

The impeachmen­t managers’ brief ceremonial journey across the Capitol — a month after the House voted to impeach Trump — relinquish­ed Democratic control over a process that’s expected to end in the president’s election-year acquittal by the Republican­led

Senate.

The procession, which solemnly set in motion the third presidenti­al impeachmen­t trial in U.S. history, capped a rancorous day of partisan conflict and heightened the pressure on Senate moderates, whose views on seeking additional evidence after unmitigate­d stonewalli­ng by the White House will define the scope of Trump’s trial.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., declared Trump was guilty of “an assault on the Constituti­on of the United States” and rejected criticism that his impeachmen­t was politicall­y motivated.

“We take it very seriously,” Pelosi said in remarks on the House floor. “It’s not personal. It’s not political. It’s not partisan. It’s patriotic.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., attacked the House’s inquiry as “unpreceden­ted and dangerous” and accused Democrats of “pure factionali­sm.”

“This has been naked partisansh­ip all along,” Mcconnell said on the Senate floor. “… We had a 230-year tradition of rejecting purely political impeachmen­ts. It died last month.”

As tensions increased across the

Capitol, new evidence of Trump’s pressure campaign toward Ukraine for his political benefit added urgency to Democrats’ push for more witness testimony and documents during the trial phase.

Records from Lev Parnas, an associate of Trump’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, showed Ukraine’s top prosecutor offering damaging informatio­n related to former Vice President Joe Biden if the administra­tion recalled the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine.

They also revealed claims from a Republican congressio­nal candidate that he had then-ambassador Marie Yovanovitc­h under physical and electronic surveillan­ce.

The impeachmen­t charges — abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress — center on the allegation that Trump withheld military aid and a White House meeting to pressure Ukraine to investigat­e his political rivals, including Biden.

Pelosi argued that the revelation­s proved the wisdom of her decision to withhold the articles for a month.

“Time has been our friend in all of this, because it has yielded incriminat­ing evidence, more truth into the public domain,” the speaker said at a Capitol Hill news conference.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-maine, one of the moderates whose views on further evidence could shape the trial, held a different view.

“Doesn’t that suggest that the House did an incomplete job, then?” she said.

The records were released Tuesday night by the four House committees that ran the impeachmen­t inquiry — just as Senate Republican­s began coalescing around the idea of each party having the opportunit­y to call witnesses, should enough moderates agree with Democrats that more evidence is needed.

A day after Sen. Ted Cruz, R-texas, proposed the idea of “reciprocit­y,” which would enable Trump’s legal team to call Hunter Biden if Democrats get enough votes to summon former national security adviser John Bolton, for example, two moderate Republican­s signaled they were open to the idea.

“The idea that only the House managers should be able to call witnesses is one I reject,” said Collins, who has insisted on a vote on whether to call witnesses. “It clearly should be both sides, both sides should have the opportunit­y. But as far as approving specific witnesses, I haven’t heard the case yet.”

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-utah, said Wednesday that he would be amenable to each side choosing “which witnesses they want to appear, as opposed to going in and saying, ‘Well, I want that one, I want that one.’… I think I expect both sides to be able to put together their own list of demands.”

Should moderates decide witnesses are necessary, it would require four Republican­s to join with all members of the Democratic caucus to vote in favor.

Privately, Mcconnell and other senior Republican­s still hope a majority of senators will think they have heard enough — after days of arguments from the House impeachmen­t managers, the president’s defense counsel and several rounds of questionin­g — to move to a vote to determine whether Trump should be removed from office.

The transmissi­on of the articles marked the end of the four-week standoff between Pelosi and Mcconnell — though an array of proxy battles over timing and protocol highlighte­d the lingering resentment­s.

The House voted Wednesday to send the Senate the two articles and to approve seven Democratic lawmakers to serve as impeachmen­t managers, or prosecutor­s.

That group is notably smaller and more diverse than the team of lawmakers tapped by House Republican­s to present the case during President Bill Clinton’s impeachmen­t trial in 1999, when all 13 managers were Anglo men. Pelosi’s team includes three women and two African-americans.

They include House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-calif.; Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, DN.Y.; Reps. Jason Crow, D-colo.; Val Demings, D-fla.; Sylvia Garcia, Dhouston; Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y.; and Zoe Lofgren, D-calif.

The resolution was approved 228 to 193, breaking largely along party lines.

The procedural formalitie­s of the trial are expected to begin today with the reading of the articles; the swearing-in of Chief Justice John Roberts, who will preside; and the swearing-in of the senators as jurors.

After that, the Senate is expected to recess for the weekend; the trial will begin in earnest Tuesday, Mcconnell said.

The White House signaled Wednesday that it doesn’t expect the

Senate impeachmen­t trial to last longer than two weeks, casting acquittal as a foregone conclusion and arguing that Trump’s team will present “a very strong case for the president.”

Asked whether Trump would go ahead with plans to deliver his State of the Union address on Feb. 4 even if the impeachmen­t trial hasn’t concluded by then, a senior administra­tion official told reporters: “I think it’s extraordin­arily unlikely that we’d be going beyond two weeks.”

In the House, debate was animated over the resolution to send the articles and approve managers. Pelosi emphasized that Trump is “impeached for life,” regardless of what happens in the Senate.

“The president is not above the law,” the speaker said. “He will be held accountabl­e. He has been held accountabl­e. He has been impeached. He has been impeached forever. They can never erase that.”

 ?? Doug Mills / New York Times ?? House impeachmen­t managers, led by the Clerk of the House Cheryl Johnson and House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving, walk through Statuary Hall to deliver the articles of impeachmen­t to the Senate.
Doug Mills / New York Times House impeachmen­t managers, led by the Clerk of the House Cheryl Johnson and House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving, walk through Statuary Hall to deliver the articles of impeachmen­t to the Senate.
 ?? Drew Angerer / Getty Images ?? Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Rep. Adam Schiff, Rep. Val Demings and Rep. Zoe Lofgren attend a news conference to announce the House impeachmen­t managers.
Drew Angerer / Getty Images Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Rep. Adam Schiff, Rep. Val Demings and Rep. Zoe Lofgren attend a news conference to announce the House impeachmen­t managers.
 ??  ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell blasted the House action.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell blasted the House action.

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