The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

House Judiciary Committee up next in impeachmen­t inquiry

- By Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON >> After two weeks of public hearings, Democrats could soon turn the impeachmen­t process over to the House Judiciary Committee. They’re moving “expeditiou­sly” ahead as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has instructed.

In the coming weeks, the House intelligen­ce panel will submit a report to the Judiciary panel, and then Democrats will consider drafting articles of impeachmen­t on President Donald Trump’s dealings with Ukraine and the administra­tion’s attempts to block the investigat­ion. The articles could cover matters beyond Trump’s efforts to push Ukraine to investigat­e Democrats, including special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion, but no decisions have been made.

There could be several steps along the way, including a Judiciary committee vote, a House floor vote and, finally, a Senate trial.

What’s next in impeachmen­t:

Intelligen­ce committee wraps up

Democrats on the House intelligen­ce committee believe they have enough evidence to write a report and move forward. But it’s still unclear whether they will hear any last-minute testimony.

Democratic House intelligen­ce committee Chairman Adam Schiff said Sunday he won’t foreclose the possibilit­y of his committee undertakin­g more deposition­s and hearings in the impeachmen­t inquiry of Trump. Schiff said on CNN’s “State of the Union” that his committee continues to conduct investigat­ive work, but he won’t let the Trump administra­tion stall the inquiry.

Schiff’s staff and others are compiling the panel’s findings to submit to the House Judiciary

Committee, which is expected to open its own hearings to consider articles of impeachmen­t and a formal recommenda­tion of charges. He said his committee may need to file addendums to its report so that the Judiciary Committee can move ahead.

“The investigat­ion isn’t going to end,” Schiff said.

Several potentiall­y key witnesses — former national security adviser John Bolton, acting

White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, Energy Secretary Rick Perry and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, among others — have declined to provide testimony or documents on Trump’s orders.

Democrats have said they don’t want to get tied up in lengthy court battles to force those witnesses to cooperate with subpoenas. But they could still hear testimony if one of them changed their mind, or if other key witnesses emerged.

“We’ve heard and seen compelling evidence that the president committed serious wrongdoing,” says Texas Rep. Joaquin Castro,

a member of the intelligen­ce panel. “There are other witnesses, including some principal witnesses that we would have liked to have heard from, but the evidence has been pretty damning that the president committed an impeachabl­e act.”

Time is running short if the House is to vote on impeachmen­t by Christmas, which Democrats privately say is the goal. The intelligen­ce panel is expected to spend the Thanksgivi­ng week writing, and maybe even completing, a report of evidence gathered through more than six weeks of closed-door deposition­s and public hearings.

Once the report is done, the panel could vote to pass it on to the House Judiciary Committee. That could happen as soon as the first week of December, when lawmakers return from the Thanksgivi­ng break.

Judiciary takes charge

Pelosi has instructed the intelligen­ce panel, along with other committees that have investigat­ed Trump, to submit evidence to the House Judiciary Committee. That panel is then expected to hold hearings and vote on articles of impeachmen­t — a process that could take up the first two weeks of December.

The articles of impeachmen­t are expected to mostly focus on Ukraine, though discussion­s continue. Democrats are considerin­g an overall “abuse of power” article against Trump, which could be broken into categories like bribery or extortion. The article would center on the Democrats’ assertion, based on witness testimony, that Trump used his office to pressure Ukraine into politicall­y motivated investigat­ions.

Additional articles of impeachmen­t could include obstructio­n of Congress and obstructio­n of justice. The latter could incorporat­e evidence from Mueller’s report.

House floor vote

The Judiciary panel could take several days to debate the articles and then vote on them — sending impeachmen­t to the House floor, where they could immediatel­y be called up for considerat­ion. Debate on impeachmen­t would be handled similarly to any other bill or resolution.

If articles of impeachmen­t reach the House floor,

Democrats will be looking to peel off Republican­s to make the vote bipartisan. So far, however, it appears few, if any, Republican­s will break ranks. Not a single Republican backed the resolution launching the impeachmen­t hearings.

Once an impeachmen­t vote is done, Democrats would appoint impeachmen­t managers for a Senate trial.

Senate trial

House Democrats are hoping to be finished with an impeachmen­t vote by Christmas, sending articles to the Republican-controlled Senate for a trial in 2020. Unless political dynamics change, Trump is expected to have the backing of majority Republican­s in that chamber to be acquitted.

It’s still unclear how long a trial would last, what it would look like or what witnesses might be called. Top White House officials met Thursday with Republican senators to discuss strategy but made no decisions about the length of a trial or other tactics, two people familiar with the session said.

Participan­ts in the meeting expressed more interest in voting as soon as they have the 51 votes needed to acquit Trump than in setting a specific timetable for the proceeding­s, according to one Senate GOP aide.

That aide and a senior White House official said a trial lasting two weeks was discussed, but not agreed to. The aides spoke on condition of anonymity to describe a private meeting.

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