WASHINGTON
(AP) — House Democrats are poised to unveil two articles of impeachment
Tuesday against President Donald Trump — abuse of power and obstruction
of Congress. Trump, meanwhile, insisted he did “NOTHING” wrong and that
impeaching a president with a record like his would be “sheer Political
Madness!”
Democratic leaders say Trump put U.S. elections and national security at risk when he asked Ukraine to investigate his rivals, including Democrat Joe Biden.
Speaker
Nancy Pelosi declined during an event Monday evening to discuss the
articles or the coming announcement. Details were shared by multiple
people familiar with the discussions but not authorized to discuss them
and granted anonymity.
When
asked if she has enough votes to impeach the Republican president,
Pelosi leader said she would let House lawmakers vote their conscience.
“On
an issue like this, we don’t count the votes. People will just make
their voices known on it,” Pelosi said at The Wall Street Journal CEO
Council. “I haven’t counted votes, nor will I.”
The outcome, though, appears increasingly set as the House prepares to vote, as it has only three times in history against a U.S. president.
Trump,
who has declined to mount a defense in the impeachment proceedings,
tweeted Tuesday just as the five Democratic House committee chairmen
prepared to make their announcement.
“To
Impeach a President who has proven through results, including producing
perhaps the strongest economy in our country’s history, to have one of
the most successful presidencies ever, and most importantly, who has
done NOTHING wrong, is sheer Political Madness! #2020Election,” he wrote
on Twitter.
The president also spent part of Monday tweeting against the impeachment proceedings. He and his allies have called the process “absurd.”
Pelosi
convened a meeting of the impeachment committee chairmen at her office
in the Capitol late Monday following an acrimonious, nearly 10-hour
hearing at the Judiciary Committee, which could vote as soon as this
week.
“I think
there’s a lot of agreement,” Rep. Eliot Engel of New York, the
Democratic chairman of the Foreign Affairs committee, told reporters as
he exited Pelosi’s office. “A lot of us believe that what happened with
Ukraine especially is not something we can just close our eyes to.”
At the Judiciary hearing, Democrats said Trump’s push to have Ukraine investigate rival Joe Biden while withholding U.S. military aid ran counter to U.S. policy and benefited Russia as well as himself.
“President
Trump’s persistent and continuing effort to coerce a foreign country to
help him cheat to win an election is a clear and present danger to our
free and fair elections and to our national security,” said Dan Goldman,
the director of investigations at the House Intelligence Committee,
presenting the finding of the panel’s 300-page report of the inquiry.
Republicans
rejected not just Goldman’s conclusion of the Ukraine matter; they also
questioned his very appearance before the Judiciary panel. In a series
of heated exchanges, they said Rep. Adam Schiff, the chairman of the
Intelligence Committee, should appear rather than sending his lawyer.
From the White House, Trump tweeted repeatedly, assailing the “Witch Hunt!” and “Do Nothing Democrats.”
In drafting the articles of impeachment, Pelosi
is facing a legal and political challenge of balancing the views of her
majority while hitting the Constitution’s bar of “treason, bribery or
other high crimes and misdemeanors.”
Some
liberal lawmakers wanted more expansive charges encompassing the
findings from former special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe of Russian
interference in the 2016 election. Centrist Democrats preferred to keep
the impeachment articles more focused on Trump’s actions toward Ukraine.
Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., was blunt as he opened Monday’s hearing, saying, “President Trump put himself before country.”
Trump’s conduct, Nadler said at the end of the daylong hearing, “is clearly impeachable.”
Rep.
Doug Collins of Georgia, the top Republican on the committee, said
Democrats are racing to jam impeachment through on a “clock and a
calendar” ahead of the 2020 presidential election.
“They
can’t get over the fact that Donald Trump is the president of the
United States, and they don’t have a candidate that can beat him,”
Collins said.
In
one testy exchange, Republican attorney Stephen Castor dismissed the
transcript of Trump’s crucial call with Ukraine as “eight ambiguous
lines” that did not amount to the president seeking a personal political
favor.
Democrats
argued vigorously that Trump’s meaning could not have been clearer in
seeking political dirt on Biden, his possible opponent in the 2020
election.
The
Republicans tried numerous times to halt or slow the proceedings, and
the hearing was briefly interrupted early on by a protester shouting,
“We voted for Donald Trump!” The protester was escorted from the House
hearing room by Capitol Police.
The White House is refusing to participate
in the impeachment process. Trump and and his allies acknowledge he
likely will be impeached in the Democratic-controlled House, but they
also expect acquittal next year in the Senate, where Republicans have
the majority.
The president was focused instead on Monday’s long-awaited release of the Justice Department report
into the 2016 Russia investigation. The inspector general found that
the FBI was justified in opening its investigation into ties between the
Trump presidential campaign and Russia and that the FBI did not act
with political bias, despite “serious performance failures” up the
bureau’s chain of command.
Democrats say Trump abused his power in a July 25 phone call
when he asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy for a favor in
investigating Democrats. That was bribery, they say, since Trump was
withholding nearly $400 million in military aid that Ukraine depended on
to counter Russian aggression.
Pelosi
and Democrats point to what they call a pattern of misconduct by Trump
in seeking foreign interference in elections from Mueller’s inquiry of
the Russia probe to Ukraine.
In
his report, Mueller said he could not determine that Trump’s campaign
conspired or coordinated with Russia in the 2016 election. But Mueller
said he could not exonerate Trump of obstructing justice in the probe and left it for Congress to determine.
___
Associated Press writers Julie Pace, Laurie Kellman, Matthew Daly and Eric Tucker contributed to this report.
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