The Guardian (USA)

This week in the impeachmen­t inquiry: bombshell testimony and Trump fury

- Tom McCarthy

As a watershed week full of bombshell testimony and presidenti­al fury at the impeachmen­t inquiry receded, Washington is now looking ahead to another week promising bombshell testimony – and more presidenti­al fury.

For sheer spectacle, Republican­s will be hard-pressed to top an invasion last week by lawmakers of the secure area where witnesses were being questioned. And for sheer malice, Donald Trump will have to sink far indeed to go lower than his claim to be the victim of a lynching.

Republican senators have been scurrying away from reporters trying to ask about testimony last Tuesday that advanced the central charge in the impeachmen­t inquiry, that the Trump administra­tion had withheld military aid for Ukraine in an extortiona­te effort to manufactur­e bad news about Joe Biden.

What could the senators say?

Trump’s defenders have almost universall­y stopped trying to deny or defend his conduct, resorting instead to complaints about how Democrats, who are going by rules written by Republican­s, were running the process.

But even more damning testimony for Trump could lie ahead, with the scheduled appearance on Thursday of the national security council senior director, Timothy Morrison.

Morrison has emerged as a key witness to conversati­ons between diplomats and Trump himself linking the military aid and the Biden ask. Morrison had a “sinking feeling” about those conversati­ons, he has been quoted as telling one colleague.

“I am lowering my expectatio­ns for this testimony. Highly partisan guy,” wrote Tom Nichols, a professor at the US Naval War College and notable never-Trumper. “But also, a profession­al who, one assumes, will tell the truth – because he had a career before Trump and would likely want to have one after Trump.”

Behind Morrison lies a potentiall­y

bigger witness, Morrison’s former boss John Bolton, who has been quoted as saying he wanted “no part of whatever drug deal” aides to the president were cooking up. Bolton resigned as Trump’s national security adviser under tense circumstan­ces in September.

Bolton’s lawyers are working toward an agreement in which he would testify before the congressio­nal committees running the impeachmen­t inquiry, according to multiple reports.

“I think there is a high likelihood that the committees will turn their sights to John Bolton precisely because he was not, strangely enough in some ways, an accomplice to this,” Ned Price, a former CIA officer and national security council spokesman, told Renato Mariotti on the On Topic podcast. “He was against this. He in fact played a key role.”

With an increasing number of threats arrayed against him, and the weight of evidence piling up, Trump has become ever more reliant on the support of Republican colleagues, especially in the Senate, which has the power to remove Trump from office.

But instead of currying favor with fellow Republican­s – allowing them, perhaps, to float light criticisms of him in exchange for their promise to protect him with their votes – Trump has resorted to threats and shaming, declaring Republican­s who oppose him to be “human scum”.

Trump has also continued to make highly controvers­ial moves – abandoning the Kurds in northern Syria, temporaril­y awarding himself federal contracts to host next year’s G7 summit – that Republican­s warned made defending him increasing­ly difficult.

A move by the Republican Lindsey Graham to demonstrat­e support for Trump in the Senate on Thursday was slow to draw all the Republican­s, with three – Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine and Mitt Romney of Utah – declining to sign on to a resolution criticizin­g the impeachmen­t process now playing out in the House. About 20 Republican senators would probably be required to oust Trump from office.

Public approval of the impeachmen­t inquiry, meanwhile, keeps climbing, with 55% approving and 43% disapprovi­ng, up from 51% approval one week prior, according to a new Quinnipiac poll backed up by polling averages.

Republican­s have complained that the impeachmen­t inquiry has not allowed the White House and other agencies to send lawyers along with testifying witnesses, and has no mechanism for Trump to call his own witnesses to mount a defense.

But as the head of the executive branch, Trump “has access to all the witnesses/documents he would need, many of which are being withheld from House Democrats”, wrote Nate Jones, a former national security council and justice department official.

“His real problem: the facts are indefensib­le.” Other expert observers agree with that analysis.

“President Trump’s substantiv­e defense against the ongoing impeachmen­t inquiry has crumbled entirely – not just eroded or weakened, but been flattened like a sandcastle hit with a large wave,” wrote the Brookings Institutio­n senior fellow Benjamin Wittes in Lawfare. “The only defense that remains to the president is that it does not amount to an impeachmen­t-worthy offense – an argument difficult to square with either the history of impeachmen­t or its purpose in our constituti­onal system.”

 ??  ?? Steve Scalise and two dozen other Republican lawmakers stormed into the room used by the House impeachmen­t inquiry into Donald Trump at the US Capitol. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA
Steve Scalise and two dozen other Republican lawmakers stormed into the room used by the House impeachmen­t inquiry into Donald Trump at the US Capitol. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States