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McConnell: Senate Must Take up Impeachment if House Approves
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By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
September 30, 2019

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WASHINGTON โ€” Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said Monday that Senate rules would require him to take up any articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump if approved by the House, swatting down talk that that the GOP-controlled chamber could dodge the matter entirely.

โ€œI would have no choice but to take it up. How long youโ€™re on it is a whole different matter.โ€ โ€” Republican Leader Mitch McConnell
โ€œI would have no choice but to take it up,โ€ McConnell said on CNBC. But he cautioned, โ€œHow long youโ€™re on it is a whole different matter.โ€
House Democrats are pushing for quick action on their probe into a phone transcript and whistleblower complaint that Trump pressured Ukraineโ€™s president to investigate Democratic foe Joe Bidenโ€™s family. If the House approves articles of impeachment โ€” not introduced at this point โ€” they would be sent to the Senate for trial. McConnell suggested he does not have the 67 votes to change the rules. But the Kentucky Republican, the Senateโ€™s chief strategist, left open what he means by taking up the issue.
Those tricky procedural questions could affect Trumpโ€™s political future and next yearโ€™s presidential and congressional election.
As Trump raged on Twitter on Monday, the House plowed ahead with formal impeachment proceedings into whether the president pressured the leader of an Eastern European country to investigate former Vice President Biden and his son.
Democrats are driving the proceedings toward what some hope is a vote to impeach, or indict, Trump by yearโ€™s end, and they have launched a coordinated political, messaging and polling strategy aimed at keeping any backlash in closely divided districts from toppling their House majority.

There Remains a Stark Partisan Divide on the Issue

House intelligence committee chairman Adam Schiff is expected to issue new subpoenas, depose witnesses and perhaps hold a hearing as soon as this week. He said on Sunday that the panel would hear from the still-secret whistleblower โ€œvery soon,โ€ but that no date had been set and other details remained to be worked out.
Polling showed some movement in public sentiment. A one-day NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll conducted Sept. 25 found that about half of Americans โ€” 49% โ€” approve of the House formally starting an impeachment inquiry into Trump.
There remains a stark partisan divide on the issue, with 88% of Democrats approving and 93% of Republicans disapproving of the inquiry. But the findings suggest movement: Earlier polls conducted throughout Trumpโ€™s presidency have consistently found a majority saying he should not be impeached.
The sometimes-confusing challenge of defending Trump broke into the open on Sundayโ€™s talk shows. Rudy Giuliani, the presidentโ€™s lawyer, insisted the real story is a conspiracy theory that has been debunked. Stephen Miller, Trumpโ€™s senior policy adviser, blamed a โ€œdeep stateโ€ of Democrats within the government. And Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio pointed at Bidenโ€™s son.
But the real question for Republicans is what happens if the House votes to impeach Trump and sends the issue to the Senate for trial.
A memorandum that Senate Republicans circulated over the weekend acknowledged it would be hard for McConnell to โ€œbar the doorsโ€ and prevent the resolution managers from presenting the articles to the Senate. After that, though, McConnell has procedural options, including limiting the time they could be considered.

Photo of Mitch McConnell
Senate majority leader Republican Mitch McConnell attends a press conference with members of the Senate Republican leadership on Tuesday, September 24, 2019 at the Capitol in Washington. (AP Photo / Jacquelyn Martin)

The Result Has Been a Rainbow of Approaches

โ€œHow long youโ€™re on it is a whole different matter,โ€ he said, without elaborating.
Republicans, meanwhile were split over how and whether to defend Trumpโ€™s own words contained in a phone transcript and his actions, described by a whistleblowerโ€™s report โ€” both of which were made public by the White House.
The result has been a rainbow of approaches, led by Trump, who stormed on Twitter that the whistleblower was โ€œfakeโ€ and suggested the people leading the probe should be arrested and charged with treason.
โ€œThe Fake Whistleblower complaint is not holding up,โ€ he tweeted Monday morning.


โ€œI am deeply frustrated with what he and the legal team is doing and repeating that debunked theory to the president. It sticks in his mind when he hears it over and over again,โ€ said Tom Bossert, Trumpโ€™s former homeland security adviser. โ€œThat conspiracy theory has got to go, they have to stop with that, it cannot continue to be repeated.โ€
Not only did Giuliani repeat it Sunday, he brandished pieces of paper he said were affidavits supporting his story.
โ€œTom Bossert doesnโ€™t know whatโ€™s heโ€™s talking about,โ€ Guiliani said. He added that Trump was framed by the Democrats.

Trump Has Insisted His Call Was โ€˜Perfectโ€™

Senior White House policy adviser Stephen Miller, meanwhile, noted that heโ€™s worked in the federal government โ€œfor nearly three years.โ€
โ€œI know the difference between whistleblower and a deep state operative,โ€ Miller said. โ€œThis is a deep state operative, pure and simple.โ€
Meanwhile, Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, heatedly said Trump was merely asking Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to root out corruption. That, Jordan said, includes Hunter Bidenโ€™s membership on the board of a Ukrainian gas company at the same time his father was leading the Obama administrationโ€™s diplomatic dealings with Kyiv. There has been no evidence of wrongdoing by either of the Bidens.
Trump has insisted his call was โ€œperfect.โ€
โ€œHe didnโ€™t even know that it was wrong,โ€ said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, describing her own phone call from Trump in which the president suggested the documents would exonerate him.
Bossert, an alumnus of Republican George W. Bushโ€™s administration, offered a theory and some advice to Trump: Move past the fury over the 2016 Russia investigation, in which special counsel Robert Mueller found no evidence of conspiracy but plenty of examples of Trumpโ€™s obstruction.
โ€œI honestly believe this president has not gotten his pound of flesh yet from past grievances on the 2016 investigation,โ€ Bossert said. โ€œIf he continues to focus on that white whale, itโ€™s going to bring him down.โ€

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