The News-Times

Pelosi weighs pressure to impeach with plans for ‘ironclad’ investigat­ion

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WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi still isn’t ready to impeach President Donald Trump.

Even after special counsel Robert Mueller essentiall­y called on Congress to pick up where his investigat­ion left off, Pelosi isn’t budging. Scores of her Democratic lawmakers want to start impeachmen­t proceeding­s. Outside groups say it’s time. But Pelosi is carrying on as she has since taking the speaker’s gavel in January, promising the House will methodical­ly pursue its investigat­ions of Trump — wherever they lead.

This is Pelosi’s balancing act: toggling between mounting pressure from other Democrats and her own political instincts. She’s sticking with her plans for a more measured, “ironclad” investigat­ion that makes it clear to Americans the choices ahead. It’s uncharted territory for the speaker, and this Congress, with both high risks and possible rewards ahead of the 2020 election.

Trump declared his own challenge on Thursday . He called impeachmen­t a “dirty, filthy, disgusting word” and said courts would never allow it.

“Many constituen­ts want to impeach the president,” Pelosi acknowledg­ed shortly after Mueller’s remarks Wednesday. “But we want to do what is right and what gets results.”

Her calculus is political as well as practical, knowing that even if Democrats in the House have the votes to approve articles of impeachmen­t, the Republican majority in the Senate is hardly likely to vote to convict him. Opinion polling does not favor impeachmen­t, and a full-blown but failed effort might well help the president win re-election. Rather than go it alone, she is urging Democrats to build the case so the public is with them, whatever they decide.

“Nothing is off the table,” Pelosi said, “but we do want to make such a compelling case, such an ironclad case.”

It has been this way for weeks. As more and more Democratic lawmakers — and presidenti­al candidates — call for impeachmen­t proceeding­s, Pelosi is urging restraint. Those around her say she’s feeling no pressure.

On Wednesday, many Democrats took Mueller’s words as an invitation to impeach.

Mueller told the country, as he said in his 448-page report last month, that while charging the president with obstructin­g justice was “not an option” under Department of Justice guidelines, he also did not exonerate Trump.

Instead, Mueller said, “the Constituti­on requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting President of wrongdoing.”

 ?? Matt Slocum / Associated Press ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.
Matt Slocum / Associated Press Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

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