WASHINGTON
(AP) — President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial is shifting to
questions from senators, a pivotal juncture as Republicans lack the
votes to block witnesses and face a potential setback in their hope of
ending the trial with a quick acquittal.
After
Trump’s defense team rested Tuesday with a plea to “end now,” Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell privately told senators he doesn’t yet
have the votes to brush back Democratic demands for witnesses now that
revelations from John Bolton, the former national security adviser, have
roiled the trial.
Bolton
writes in a forthcoming book that Trump told him he wanted to withhold
military aid from Ukraine until it helped with investigations into
Democratic rival Joe Biden. That assertion, if true, would undercut a
key defense argument and go to the heart of one of the two articles of
impeachment against the president.
“I think Bolton probably has something to offer us,” said Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska.
Not
in Trump’s view. “Why didn’t John Bolton complain about this ‘nonsense’
a long time ago, when he was very publicly terminated,” Trump tweeted
shortly after midnight. “He said, not that it matters, NOTHING!”
The
uncertainty about witnesses arises days before crucial votes on the
issue. In a Senate split 53-47 in favor of Republicans, at least four
GOP senators must join all Democrats to reach the 51 votes required to
call witnesses, decide whom to call or do nearly anything else in the
trial. Several Republicans apparently are ready to join Democrats in
calling witnesses.
The
two days set aside for questions, Wednesday and Thursday, also allow
each side more time to win over any undecided senators pondering the
witness issue. In the meantime, all will have the opportunity to grill
both the House Democrats prosecuting the case and the president’s
defense team.
Held
to submitting written questions to be read by Chief Justice John
Roberts, senators are expected to dig into the big themes of the trial —
among them whether what Trump did or may have done rises to the level
of “high crimes and misdemeanors” — as well as pointed and partisan
attacks on each side’s case.
Trump faces charges
from Democrats that he abused his power like no other president,
jeopardizing U.S.-Ukraine relations by using the military aid as
leverage while the vulnerable ally battled Russia. Democrats say Trump
then obstructed their probe in a way that threatens the nation’s
three-branch system of checks and balances.
The
president’s legal team tried to lock up its case Tuesday and convince
GOP senators that the president was right to ask Ukraine for
investigations of Biden and his son Hunter and was well within his power
to block the aid. They said he was not bound to abide by the
congressional investigation.
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