UPDATE 9-U.S. House committee nears vote on impeachment articles against Trump


Reuters | Washington DC | Updated: 13-12-2019 09:05 IST | Created: 13-12-2019 09:03 IST
UPDATE 9-U.S. House committee nears vote on impeachment articles against Trump
US President Donald Trump (File pic) Image Credit: ANI
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U.S. lawmakers moved closer on Thursday to impeaching Republican President Donald Trump, as members of a House of Representatives committee debated formal charges that are likely to be sent to the full House for a final vote next week. The House Judiciary Committee is expected to approve two articles of impeachment later on Thursday, setting up a vote by the Democratic-controlled House next week that is expected to make Trump the third president in U.S. history to be impeached.

If the House impeaches Trump, who is charged with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress, he would then go on trial in the Senate. The Republican-led chamber is unlikely to vote to find the president guilty and remove him from office. The House Judiciary Committee proceedings ground on through the afternoon and into the evening as Republicans, determined to punish Democrats by stretching out the meeting, offered a series of amendments that would emasculate the articles of impeachment but had no hope of adoption.

The Democratic majority voted down five Republican amendments after lengthy debates. As the hours dragged on, some lawmakers could be seen dozing in their seats while others sat glassy-eyed listening to their colleagues repeat and reiterate the same points over and over. "I have not heard a new point or an original thought from either side in the last three hours,” an exasperated Republican Representative Tom McClintock complained as proceedings neared their 12th hour. “If I could just offer a modest suggestion: if no one has anything new to add, that they resist the temptation to inflict what we've already heard over and over again.”

Republicans on the Judiciary panel repeatedly complained about the procedures followed by Democrats in the impeachment inquiry, and said Democrats had overplayed their hand in a desperate attempt to overturn the results of the 2016 election. Republicans requested another hearing and said their rights had been trampled in the inquiry, but were voted down by the panel's Democratic majority. Republicans also moved to strike the first charge of abuse of power, but the committee rejected it on a party-line vote.

"Rules have just been thrown out the window in this process," said Republican U.S. Representative Debbie Lesko. "It continues to amaze me how corrupt, how unfair this process has been from the start." Democrats accuse Trump of abusing his power by trying to force Ukraine to investigate political rival Joe Biden and of obstructing Congress when lawmakers tried to look into the matter. Biden, a former vice president, is a leading contender for the Democratic nomination to run against Trump next year.

Republicans on the committee said there were no crimes alleged in the impeachment articles and "abuse of power" had become a catch-all for Democratic complaints about Trump. "This notion of abuse of power is the lowest of low-energy impeachment theories," said Republican Representative Matt Gaetz.

Democrats chided Republicans for their loyalty to Trump. “Forget about President Trump. Will any one of my colleagues on the other side say that it is an abuse of power to condition aid on official acts?" said Democratic Representative Pramila Jayapal. "Is any one of my colleagues willing to say that it is ever OK for a president of the United States of America to invite foreign interference in our elections?"

Trump has denied wrongdoing and condemned the impeachment inquiry as a hoax. "No crime!" Trump wrote on Twitter early Thursday.

Much of the impeachment focus has been on a July 25 phone call in which Trump asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigate Biden and his son Hunter, who was on the board of a Ukrainian gas company. Trump has also instructed current and former members of his administration not to testify or produce documents, leading senior officials like Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to defy House subpoenas. Democrats say that behavior by Trump constitutes obstruction of Congress.

'PHONY HEARING'

Trump appeared to be watching some of the proceedings on Thursday, tweeting rebuttals to Democratic arguments as they were made. He said Democrats were misrepresenting his talks with Ukraine and called the proceedings a "phony hearing."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters the full House would take up the articles of impeachment next week if approved by the committee. "The articles of impeachment will pass," Representative Hakeem Jeffries, the House Democratic caucus chairman, told reporters. A Senate trial is expected next month on the charges. Senior Republicans in the chamber appeared to be moving toward a consensus that a streamlined proceeding with no witnesses would allow Trump and the Senate to end the matter and quickly move on.

Republican Senator Kevin Cramer said he thought the Senate trial would last a week to two weeks at most. "The sooner we can dismiss it the better. Especially when it’s going to be 10 months from the next election," Cramer said.

But Republican Senator John Cornyn floated a possible hybrid approach. He said he favored a Senate trial that would have private depositions of witnesses with excerpts provided to the 100 senators "rather than call live witnesses, which might rival the three-ring circus in the House of Representatives." He said the idea was presented to White House lawyers but no decisions had been made.

White House counsel Pat Cipollone and legislative liaison Eric Ueland met on Thursday afternoon with Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader to discuss the potential for a Senate trial. "We have great, clear, open lines of communication with our friends here in the Senate and we'll keep talking with them as we move ahead," Ueland told reporters outside the meeting.

Democrats sought to simplify the public case against Trump by not including other contentious aspects of Trump's tenure, such as his efforts to impede former Special Counsel Robert Mueller's Russia probe. Democratic lawmakers from more conservative districts had argued the focus should stay on Ukraine. Still, several Democrats in swing districts remain unsure how they will vote on impeachment, although with a 36-seat Democratic lead over Republicans in the House, passage is expected.

Democratic Representative Jeff Van Drew, one of two House Democrats to vote against launching the impeachment inquiry, said he would definitely vote against the articles of impeachment but he expected very few other Democratic defections. Trump and Republicans have tried to use the issue to attack Democratic presidential candidates and those vulnerable House members.

Pelosi said Democratic House leaders were not pressuring any uncertain members to support the impeachment. "I have not gotten one ounce of pressure one way or another on impeachment," said Democratic Representative Anthony Brindisi, who said he was undecided on whether to back the articles of impeachment.

Public support for impeachment has largely fallen along party lines, with the vast majority of Democrats supporting it and most Republicans opposed. Trump's approval rating in opinion polls has largely remained consistent at about 43% throughout the inquiry.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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