WASHINGTON
(AP) — A U.S. ambassador is expected to tell Congress that his text
message reassuring another envoy that there was no quid pro quo in their
interactions with Ukraine was based solely on what President Donald
Trump told him, according to a person familiar with his coming testimony
in the impeachment probe.
Gordon Sondland,
Trump’s hand-picked ambassador to the European Union, is among
administration officials being subpoenaed to appear on Capitol Hill this
week against the wishes of the White House. It’s the latest test
between the legislative and executive branches of government, as the impeachment inquiry by House Democrats deepens.
On
Monday, the House panels leading the investigation expect to hear from
Fiona Hill, a former top National Security Council expert on Russia.
Sondland’s
appearance, set for Thursday, comes after a cache of text messages from
top envoys provided a vivid account of their work acting as
intermediaries around the time Trump urged Ukraine’s new president,
Volodymr Zelenskiy, to start investigations into a company linked to the
family of a chief Democratic presidential rival, Joe Biden.
One witness who may not be called before Congress is the still anonymous government whistleblower
who touched off the impeachment inquiry. Top Democrats say testimony
and evidence coming in from other witnesses, and even the president
himself, are backing up the whistleblower’s account of what transpired
during Trump’s July 25 phone call
with Zelenskiy. Lawmakers have grown deeply concerned about protecting
the person from Trump’s threats over the matter and may not wish to risk
exposing the whistleblower’s identity.
Democratic
Rep. Adam Schiff, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said
Sunday, “We don’t need the whistleblower, who wasn’t on the call, to
tell us what took place during the call. We have the best evidence of
that.”
Schiff said it “may not be necessary”
to reveal the whistleblower’s identity as the House gathers evidence.
“Our primary interest right now is making sure that that person is
protected,” he said.
The impeachment inquiry
is testing the Constitution’s system of checks and balances as the
House presses forward with the probe and the White House dismisses it as
“illegitimate” without a formal vote of the House to open impeachment
proceedings.
In calling for a vote, the
White House is trying to press House Democrats who may be politically
reluctant to put their names formally behind impeachment. But House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has resisted those efforts and is
unlikely to budge as Congress returns. Democrats say Congress is well
within its power as the legislative branch to conduct oversight of the
president and it is Republicans, having grown weary of Trump’s actions,
who may be in the greater political bind over a vote.
Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., said Sunday he’d be fine with taking a formal vote, “but it’s not required.”
“Look,
my own opinion is that we ought to just take this off the table because
it’s such a non-issue, and there’s no doubt in my mind that of course
if Nancy Pelosi does that she will have the votes and that will pass,”
Himes said.
Sondland’s appearance comes
after text messages from top ambassadors described their interactions
leading up to Trump’s call and the aftermath.
Sondland
is set to tell lawmakers that he did understand the administration was
offering Zelenskiy a White House visit in exchange for a public
statement committing to investigations Trump wanted, according to the
person, who demanded anonymity to discuss remarks not yet given.
But
Sondland will say he did not know the company being talked about for an
investigation, Burisma, was tied to Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, the
person said. Sondland understood the discussions about combating
corruption to be part of a much broader and publicized Trump
administration push that was widely shared, the person said.
In
the text exchange, the diplomats raised alarm that Trump appeared to up
the ante, withholding military aid to Ukraine over the investigation.
One
seasoned diplomat on the text message, William Taylor, called it “crazy
to withhold security assistance” to Ukraine in exchange for “help with a
political campaign.”
Sondland responds that
the assertion is “incorrect” about Trump’s intentions. “The President
has been crystal clear no quid pro quo’s of any kind,” he said in the
text message.
The person familiar with
Sondland’s testimony said that before Sondland sent that text, he spoke
to Trump, who told him there was no quid pro quo. Sondland then repeated
that message to Taylor.
Schiff appeared on “Face the Nation” on CBS and Himes spoke on ABC’s “This Week.”
___
Tucker reported from Providence, Rhode Island.
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