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With Trump Impeachment Trial in Limbo, Schumer Demands Emails and Documents | With Trump Impeachment Trial in Limbo, Schumer Demands Emails and Documents |
(32 minutes later) | |
With Republicans resisting witness testimony, Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, issued a new demand on Monday for internal White House emails and other documents that he wants subpoenaed for President Trump’s impeachment trial. | With Republicans resisting witness testimony, Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, issued a new demand on Monday for internal White House emails and other documents that he wants subpoenaed for President Trump’s impeachment trial. |
In a letter to his Senate colleagues, Mr. Schumer laid out a long list of records that Democrats would like to see, including internal emails and documents from the White House, the State Department and the Office of Management and Budget relating to the president’s effort to press Ukraine’s leader to investigate Mr. Trump’s political rivals. | In a letter to his Senate colleagues, Mr. Schumer laid out a long list of records that Democrats would like to see, including internal emails and documents from the White House, the State Department and the Office of Management and Budget relating to the president’s effort to press Ukraine’s leader to investigate Mr. Trump’s political rivals. |
“There simply is no good reason why evidence that is directly relevant to the conduct at issue in the articles of impeachment should be withheld from the Senate and the American people,” Mr. Schumer wrote in asking for the documents. | “There simply is no good reason why evidence that is directly relevant to the conduct at issue in the articles of impeachment should be withheld from the Senate and the American people,” Mr. Schumer wrote in asking for the documents. |
The letter came amid a deepening partisan impasse over Mr. Trump’s trial on “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Mr. Schumer was using the letter to increase pressure on Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, to negotiate over the format of the proceedings, but Mr. McConnell took to the airwaves to scold him. | The letter came amid a deepening partisan impasse over Mr. Trump’s trial on “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Mr. Schumer was using the letter to increase pressure on Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, to negotiate over the format of the proceedings, but Mr. McConnell took to the airwaves to scold him. |
“Do you think Chuck Schumer is impartial?” Mr. McConnell asked during an appearance Monday morning on “Fox & Friends.” He went on: “So let’s quit the charade. This is a political exercise.” | “Do you think Chuck Schumer is impartial?” Mr. McConnell asked during an appearance Monday morning on “Fox & Friends.” He went on: “So let’s quit the charade. This is a political exercise.” |
With lawmakers at home in their districts for a two-week holiday recess, Mr. Trump’s trial is in limbo. The House voted almost entirely along party lines last week to impeach Mr. Trump on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress in connection with the Ukraine matter. | With lawmakers at home in their districts for a two-week holiday recess, Mr. Trump’s trial is in limbo. The House voted almost entirely along party lines last week to impeach Mr. Trump on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress in connection with the Ukraine matter. |
For a trial to begin, the House must transmit the charges contained in the articles of impeachment to the Senate. But with Mr. McConnell coordinating trial planning with the White House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi is withholding the articles, she has said, until she gets some assurance that the proceedings will be fair. | For a trial to begin, the House must transmit the charges contained in the articles of impeachment to the Senate. But with Mr. McConnell coordinating trial planning with the White House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi is withholding the articles, she has said, until she gets some assurance that the proceedings will be fair. |
In his “Fox & Friends” appearance, Mr. McConnell called Ms. Pelosi’s decision to withhold the articles “absurd.” He predicted that she would ultimately back down. “I can’t imagine what purpose is served by her holding on to the papers, so sooner or later I’m assuming she will send them over,” he said. | In his “Fox & Friends” appearance, Mr. McConnell called Ms. Pelosi’s decision to withhold the articles “absurd.” He predicted that she would ultimately back down. “I can’t imagine what purpose is served by her holding on to the papers, so sooner or later I’m assuming she will send them over,” he said. |
Nor is Mr. McConnell likely to agree to Mr. Schumer’s demand for documents. He has already rejected Mr. Schumer’s request for testimony from four White House officials: John R. Bolton, Mr. Trump’s former national security adviser; Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff; Robert Blair, Mr. Mulvaney’s senior adviser; and Michael Duffey, an official with the Office of Management and Budget. | Nor is Mr. McConnell likely to agree to Mr. Schumer’s demand for documents. He has already rejected Mr. Schumer’s request for testimony from four White House officials: John R. Bolton, Mr. Trump’s former national security adviser; Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff; Robert Blair, Mr. Mulvaney’s senior adviser; and Michael Duffey, an official with the Office of Management and Budget. |
Democrats argue that Mr. McConnell, who has said he is “taking my cues” from the White House, is effectively letting Mr. Trump plan his own trial and violating the oath that all senators take to be impartial jurors during an impeachment trial. In his letter, Mr. Schumer took a shot at Mr. McConnell. | Democrats argue that Mr. McConnell, who has said he is “taking my cues” from the White House, is effectively letting Mr. Trump plan his own trial and violating the oath that all senators take to be impartial jurors during an impeachment trial. In his letter, Mr. Schumer took a shot at Mr. McConnell. |
“To oppose the admission of this evidence would be to turn a willfully blind eye to the facts, and would clearly be at odds with the obligation of senators to ‘do impartial justice’ according to the oath we will all take in the impeachment trial,” he wrote. | “To oppose the admission of this evidence would be to turn a willfully blind eye to the facts, and would clearly be at odds with the obligation of senators to ‘do impartial justice’ according to the oath we will all take in the impeachment trial,” he wrote. |
The letter builds on one that Mr. Schumer sent to Mr. McConnell on Dec. 15, in which he also asked for the Senate to subpoena an unspecified list of documents, along with the four witnesses. But that letter did not specify which records Mr. Schumer wanted. | The letter builds on one that Mr. Schumer sent to Mr. McConnell on Dec. 15, in which he also asked for the Senate to subpoena an unspecified list of documents, along with the four witnesses. But that letter did not specify which records Mr. Schumer wanted. |
In the new letter, he was specific. His request for the White House includes “email communications, messages, memoranda and other records” related to Mr. Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine’s president, as well as White House records related to the whistle-blower complaint that spurred the House impeachment inquiry. | In the new letter, he was specific. His request for the White House includes “email communications, messages, memoranda and other records” related to Mr. Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine’s president, as well as White House records related to the whistle-blower complaint that spurred the House impeachment inquiry. |
From the State Department, he asked for “detailed notes, emails, text and WhatsApp messages, memorandums to file, and diplomatic cables pertinent to the investigation that State Department witnesses told the House are being withheld.” The Office of Management and Budget, he wrote, “is also in possession of highly relevant documents and communications related to this case.” | |
Mr. Schumer’s letter comes on the heels of newly released emails that shed more light on Mr. Trump’s effort to solicit Ukraine to help him win re-election in 2020. The emails, released late Friday by the Trump administration to the Center for Public Integrity, show that Mr. Duffey, the budget agency official, asked officials to keep quiet over the suspension of military aid to Ukraine. | Mr. Schumer’s letter comes on the heels of newly released emails that shed more light on Mr. Trump’s effort to solicit Ukraine to help him win re-election in 2020. The emails, released late Friday by the Trump administration to the Center for Public Integrity, show that Mr. Duffey, the budget agency official, asked officials to keep quiet over the suspension of military aid to Ukraine. |
That request, the emails also show, came just 90 minutes after the call between Mr. Trump and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. During the call, Mr. Trump asked Mr. Zelensky to “do us a favor, though,” and investigate former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Mr. Biden’s son Hunter. | That request, the emails also show, came just 90 minutes after the call between Mr. Trump and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. During the call, Mr. Trump asked Mr. Zelensky to “do us a favor, though,” and investigate former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Mr. Biden’s son Hunter. |
Democrats including Mr. Schumer said on Sunday that the emails made it all the more urgent that Mr. Duffey and the other witnesses testify. | Democrats including Mr. Schumer said on Sunday that the emails made it all the more urgent that Mr. Duffey and the other witnesses testify. |
“If the president is so innocent and claims he’s innocent, why would he not allow, just like Richard Nixon did, the people that were closest to him to testify?” Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat who is seeking the presidential nomination, said Sunday on the CBS program “Face the Nation.” | “If the president is so innocent and claims he’s innocent, why would he not allow, just like Richard Nixon did, the people that were closest to him to testify?” Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat who is seeking the presidential nomination, said Sunday on the CBS program “Face the Nation.” |
The trial can proceed in one of two ways: Mr. Schumer and Mr. McConnell can reach agreement on a resolution governing the format, or Mr. McConnell can proceed on his own if he can get 51 senators to agree to a resolution. | The trial can proceed in one of two ways: Mr. Schumer and Mr. McConnell can reach agreement on a resolution governing the format, or Mr. McConnell can proceed on his own if he can get 51 senators to agree to a resolution. |
When President Bill Clinton was tried in 1999, the Senate passed two resolutions. The first, adopted unanimously, governed the basic format of the opening of the trial, including how long each side was given to present its case. The second, which passed along party lines, governed witnesses; there were three, all of whom gave depositions rather than testify in person. Mr. McConnell and other Republicans want Democrats to adopt the Clinton format. | When President Bill Clinton was tried in 1999, the Senate passed two resolutions. The first, adopted unanimously, governed the basic format of the opening of the trial, including how long each side was given to present its case. The second, which passed along party lines, governed witnesses; there were three, all of whom gave depositions rather than testify in person. Mr. McConnell and other Republicans want Democrats to adopt the Clinton format. |
“My belief is that once we’re sworn in, that 51 of us could adopt the rules from last time that would still apply,” Senator Roy Blunt, Republican of Missouri, told reporters Monday in the Capitol. | “My belief is that once we’re sworn in, that 51 of us could adopt the rules from last time that would still apply,” Senator Roy Blunt, Republican of Missouri, told reporters Monday in the Capitol. |
“The speaker is a powerful position,” Mr. Blunt added. “But it’s not so powerful that the speaker can decide not to follow through on something like this.” | “The speaker is a powerful position,” Mr. Blunt added. “But it’s not so powerful that the speaker can decide not to follow through on something like this.” |
Emily Cochrane contributed reporting. | Emily Cochrane contributed reporting. |