The Manica Post

US House set for historic vote

White House political appointee to testify

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FOR only the third time in the history of the modern presidency, the US House of Representa­tives was yesterday poised to vote to formalise impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the president of the United States.

The House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, has scheduled a morning press conference to announce the next stage in a process that seemed likely to lead to Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t – if not necessaril­y his removal from office.

The vote on Thursday, which was expected to pass on party lines, would set rules for the public phase of the impeachmen­t inquiry, laying out a road map for impeachmen­t that could produce televised public hearings within two weeks and a vote on impeachmen­t itself by the end of the year.

For weeks, congressio­nal investigat­ors have been interviewi­ng witnesses – 15 and counting – behind closed doors about alleged misconduct by Trump, who stands accused of using the power of his office to solicit foreign interferen­ce in the 2020 US election.

The parade of witnesses was scheduled to continue on Thursday, with the testimony of Tim Morrison, a senior national security council official described in previous testimony as having a “sinking feeling” about the negotiatio­ns he witnessed between Trump proxies and the Ukrainians.

Morrison, the first White House political appointee to testify, arrived on Capitol Hill on Thursday but did not respond to reporters’ questions about his testimony which takes place behind closed doors.

Trump has denied wrongdoing, claiming that a July phone call in which he asked the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, for a political “favour”, as captured in a partial transcript released by the White House and backed up by witness testimony, was “perfect”.

The desired favor, as Trump himself explained in the call, was for Ukraine to investigat­e a company that had employed a son of Joe Biden, whom Trump saw as a top political threat. Trump also wanted an investigat­ion that would cast doubt on Russian tampering in the 2016 US election.

At the time, the White House had suspended almost $400m in military aid for Ukraine appropriat­ed by Congress, and US diplomats had advised Ukrainian officials that a White House visit for Zelenskiy was contingent on the announceme­nt of investigat­ions.

If Trump is impeached, a Senate trial would follow, possibly early next year, with a two-thirds majority vote required to remove Trump from office.

“We’ve learned so much about Trump’s months-long campaign to pressure Ukraine because military veterans & his own national security aides stood up to tell the truth,” Pelosi tweeted on Wednesday. “They Donald Trump with Vladimir Putin at the G20 summit in Osaka in June this year. Trump voiced concern over the 2018 capture but did not blame Moscow.

put their country ahead of everything else. It’s not too late for Republican­s in Congress to do the same.”

In a surprise move that had Washington atwitter on Wednesday night, Morrison announced that he was resigning from his White House post. While he had planned to testify anyway, Morrison’s resignatio­n freed him absolutely from a blanket White House order that officials not participat­e in the impeachmen­t inquiry.

Still in question was whether Morrison’s former boss, the then national security adviser John Bolton, who reportedly described the back-room Trump-Ukraine haggling as a “drug deal” that he wanted no part of, would testify before Congress.

A lawyer for Bolton told Congress on Wednesday that while Bolton would not testify without a subpoena, the lawyer stood ready to receive a subpoena.

Testimony by Bolton, a Yale-educated lawyer, blistering conservati­ve hawk and expert bureaucrat­ic infighter, could be as damaging for Trump as any so far. Bolton

reportedly told aides that Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal emissary in the Ukraine saga, was a “hand grenade” that could blow everyone up, and he encouraged multiple aides to take their concerns about Trump’s Ukraine dealings to the top lawyer on the national security council.

That lawyer, John Eisenberg, has also been invited to testify next week before congressio­nal investigat­ors.

The House vote on Thursday would implement a procedure likely to lead to the drafting of articles of impeachmen­t against Trump in the judiciary committee. Analysts have said that Trump is vulnerable to impeachmen­t for abuse of power, obstructio­n of justice and contempt of Congress, charges familiar from previous impeachmen­t proceeding­s against presidents Richard Nixon, who resigned, and Bill Clinton, who was impeached but not removed from office.

The procedure allows for Republican­s to request witnesses and documents and provides for the presence of lawyers representi­ng

Trump at judiciary committee proceeding­s.

Before that stage, however, dramatic public hearings would play out before the intelligen­ce committee, chaired by Adam Schiff of California, who has been spearheadi­ng the impeachmen­t inquiry.

Schiff would call witnesses who previously testified in closed-door deposition­s before investigat­ors, with an eye on presenting to the public the strongest case against Trump. Many Americans who have not been following the twists and turns of the closed-door testimony would be hearing the allegation­s against Trump – and meeting the witnesses, who include senior officials in the White House, state department and Pentagon – for the first time.

“Trump has urged Republican­s to focus on the substance in the impeachmen­t inquiry, not the process,” Schiff tweeted on Wednesday. “I can confirm our focus will continue to be on the President’s own words and misconduct.

“Glad we all agree.”

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