Roundup of Trump impeachment inquiry on October 9 | CNN Politics

The latest on the Trump impeachment inquiry

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Biden calls for Trump impeachment for first time
02:40 - Source: CNN

Where things stand now

  • The latest: President Trump’s administration won’t cooperate in an ongoing impeachment inquiry, according to a blistering letter sent by the President’s lawyers to congressional Democrats.
  • Subpoena issued: House Democrats issued a subpoena for US Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland after the State Department directed him not to testify before Congress yesterday morning.
  • Sign up for updates: As Trump faces impeachment proceedings, it can be hard to keep up with all the daily twists and turns. We boil it down to the essentials and send it to your inbox. Sign up here.
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George Conway calls the White House letter "trash"

George Conway, husband of White House adviser Kellyanne Conway, at the White House on April 17, 2017.

George Conway, husband to White House adviser Kellyanne Conway, slammed the White House’s letter refusing to cooperate in House Democrats’ impeachment inquiry as “trash.”

The letter was “an excuse to prevent evidence, damning evidence, from reaching the public,” he said on CNN political analyst Preet Bharara’s podcast, which airs Thursday and was shared in advance with CNN.

He added that the letter “virtually guarantees” that Trump will be impeached, calling it “a disgrace to the country, a disgrace to the presidency, and a disgrace to the legal profession.”

A vocal conservative lawyer, Conway is often at odds with Trump – his wife’s boss. He previously called Trump “a racist president” in a Washington Post op-ed; Kellyanne Conway told Fox News shortly afterward, “I totally disagree. I work with this President. I know him.”

Pompeo says the State Department will take its cues from the White House

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Washington, DC, October 9, 2019.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo suggested on Wednesday that the State Department would take its cues from the White House in regards to the impeachment probe.

“The White House made a decision yesterday: They issued an extended letter talking about this process that the House is engaged in, making clear that the White House’s view is that this is not a legitimate impeachment proceeding,” Pompeo said on the show “America This Week with Eric Bolling.”

“We’ll take our guidance from them in terms of how we respond, but I’ve also make clear to my team here at the State Department: We have a mission. We still have a mission in Ukraine. We still have objectives.”

Biden campaign blasts the New York Times in a letter to its executive editor

In a letter to New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet, the Biden campaign excoriated The New York Times for its recent coverage of Joe Biden, his son Hunter Biden, and Ukraine.

The letter, released Wednesday night, was written by deputy campaign manager and communications director Kate Bedingfield. In the letter, she blasted The Times’ coverage of the debunked notion Biden abused his office to benefit his son when he was serving as vice president under the Obama administration.

Bedingfield wrote that The Times, which published a widely criticized story in May, “had an outsized hand in the spread” of the “baseless conspiracy theory.”

The Times has pushed back strongly against the letter. “Our coverage of the Biden campaign and Hunter Biden has been fair and accurate,” said a spokesperson in a statement, noting that the Biden campaign “obviously disagrees.”

The spokesperson said The Times “will continue to cover Joe Biden with the same tough and fair standards we apply to every candidate in the race and we’re happy to sit down with Biden advisers anytime to discuss news coverage.”

Trump's former Russia adviser will be interviewed Monday in impeachment probe, source says

Fiona Hill, President Trump’s former top Russia adviser, is expected to be interviewed behind closed doors Monday as part of the impeachment probe, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Democrats have had trouble scheduling witness interviews with current administration officials and State Department employees, and are preparing to move forward with new subpoenas to compel their testimony.

But Hill left the administration in August – so she presumably would be freer to speak to the committees, much the way former US Special Envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker was when he testified last week.

Hill will be interviewed by thee House panels, the source said. Axios first reported that the House committees have requested Hill appear for a deposition.

Biden says he is calling for impeachment because Trump's conduct is "over the top"

Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden in Manchester, New Hampshire, on October 9, 2019 in Manchester, New Hampshire.

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden called President Trump’s conduct “over the top” on Wednesday when asked why he was calling for impeachment.

Biden called for Trump’s impeachment for the first time earlier on Wednesday at a town hall in New Hampshire.

Speaking to WBZ, he also denied Trump’s allegations of corruption, and said multiple times that he didn’t discuss business with his son or his family.

“And so the fact is, though, everybody’s looked at that. He (Biden’s son) did nothing wrong. Zero, period. And so the focus is, what did Trump do?” he said.

Some context: Trump has repeatedly claimed that Biden had called for the firing of a Ukrainian prosecutor who was “investigating his son.”

There is no evidence Hunter Biden was ever under investigation. The investigation was into the business dealings of the owner of a Ukrainian natural gas company, Burisma Holdings, where Hunter Biden sat on the board of directors.

More than half of voters want Trump impeached according to new poll

More than half of US voters want President Trump impeached and removed from office, according to a Fox News Poll released today.

The poll marks the fourth in two days that showed public opinion is shifting on the impeachment inquiry.

A formal impeachment inquiry, launched by the House last month, centers on Trump’s July phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, after a whistleblower filed a complaint about the call.

A transcript of the conversation released by the White House shows Trump repeatedly pushed Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter. There is no evidence of wrongdoing by either Joe or Hunter Biden in Ukraine.

The Fox News poll found 51% of registered voters want Trump impeached and removed from office and another 4% want the President impeached but not removed from office. Forty percent of respondents were opposed to impeachment altogether. 

Trump turns to Mitch McConnell in hopes of locking down GOP loyalty

President Trump has been lighting up the phone lines of his allies on Capitol Hill—including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, to whom he’s stressed the importance of Republican unity.

In a return to the President’s panicked behavior during the height of the Mueller investigation, Trump is calling McConnell as often as three times a day, according to a person familiar with the conversations.

McConnell has told a small number of Republicans about the President’s calls. 

“This story, based on a single anonymous source, is categorically false. Leader McConnell never said anything like this,” Doug Andres, a McConnell spokesman, said. 

Trump has been lashing out at GOP senators he sees as disloyal, according to this person, telling McConnell he will amplify attacks on those Republicans who criticize him.

Trump’s focus on the impeachment issue is plain, even as his allies encourage him to train his attention on other issues. As former Vice President Joe Biden came out in favor of impeachment for the first time today, Trump had responded on Twitter before Biden’s speech had even concluded. While speaking in the Roosevelt Room, Trump went off-script to link a regulatory announcement to his ongoing predicament. 

Joe Biden's campaign calls for Twitter to reject Trump's video ad

Joe Biden’s campaign has sent a letter to Twitter in regard to a video ad by President Trump’s reelection campaign that falsely accuses the former vice president of corruption for his role in Ukraine policy during the Obama administration.

In the letter, obtained first by CNN, the Biden campaign asks Twitter to reject the ad should the campaign place it again.

While the letter, written by Biden campaign manager Greg Schultz, acknowledges that the social media company has said the ad complies with its policies, he asks that Twitter “promptly reassess” that position. 

Specifically, the letter calls on Twitter to make a distinction between the personal account of a politician and paid advertising content—”just as Twitter does in every other context,” the letter states. 

Some background: This letter follows another Biden’s campaign sent to Facebook asking them to take down the ad. Facebook denied the campaign’s request. Twitter has not yet responded to CNN’s request for comment.  

Biden’s team appears to be launching a broad campaign to respond to Trump’s attacks on social media as the former vice president has stepped up his rhetoric against the president in speeches across the country.

Biden called for Trump’s impeachment for the first time on Wednesday. 

Catch up: 6 key developments in the impeachment inquiry

The House continued to press forward today with the impeachment inquiry into President Trump.

If you’re just tuning in, here are the key developments:

  • Democrats plot their next steps: House Democrats are preparing a flurry of subpoenas in the face of the Trump administration stonewalling their impeachment investigation. Following a White House letter refusing to cooperate with their probe, Democrats expect they are likely done with any voluntary interviews for most witnesses, according to multiple Democratic sources.
  • Joe Biden calls for Trump’s impeachment: The former vice president called for Trump’s impeachment today for the first time at a rally in New Hampshire. Biden also said that Trump is “shooting holes in the Constitution.” The Democratic presidential candidate added: “And we cannot let him get away with it.”
  • Trump’s legal team: Former Rep. Trey Gowdy will join Trump’s legal team, according to Trump’s attorney Jay Sekulow. In a statement, Sekulow said Gowdy’s “legal skills and his advocacy will serve the President well. Trey’s command of the law is well known and his service on Capitol Hill will be a great asset as a member of our team.”
  • What the polls are saying: Polls released yesterday show Americans support an investigation into accusations that President Trump asked Ukraine to probe his 2020 rival Joe Biden — but they are not sold on the idea of the President being removed from office.
  • Mike Pompeo on the impeachment probe: In an interview with PBS NewsHour today, the Secretary of State also reiterated that Trump’s call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was appropriate and suggested it happens regularly in diplomacy. Asked if there would be “cooperation” with the House impeachment inquiry, Pompeo said the State Department and the White House will “do everything that we’re required to by the law and the Constitution.”
  • More about Ukraine: Vice President Mike Pence said today that he never discussed Biden and his son during his calls with Zelensky and that he has no objections to transcripts of his calls being released.

Trump attorney Jay Sekulow: Trey Gowdy will be "a great asset" to President's legal team

Trey Gowdy

President Donald Trump’s attorney Jay Sekulow confirmed tonight that former Rep. Trey Gowdy will join the President’s legal team.

In a statement, Sekulow said Gowdy will be “a great asset as a member of our team.”

More recently, Gowdy, a former federal prosecutor, was a Fox contributor. A network spokesperson said in a short statement today that Gowdy was “terminated and is no longer a contributor” to Fox.

Gowdy was hired as a Fox contributor in January, providing political and legal analysis across all the company’s platforms.

Pompeo on impeachment inquiry: "We will ensure that we do everything that we're required to do by the law"

Asked if there would be “cooperation” with the House impeachment inquiry, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in an interview with PBS NewsHour today that the State Department and the White House will “do everything that we’re required to by the law and the Constitution.”

Pompeo also reiterated that President Trump’s call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was appropriate and suggested it happens regularly in diplomacy.

“But the most important reaction is from President Zelensky himself who said, ‘No, I didn’t feel pushed. I didn’t feel pressured.’ Everyone keeps suggesting that somehow there was undue pressure,” Pompeo continued. “I assure you, countries all around the world every day call me to try and get America to behave in a way that’s in the best interest of their country. They try to apply pressure to me, and we work on it.”

Vice President Mike Pence says he didn't discuss Bidens with Ukraine's president

Vice President Mike Pence said today that he never discussed former Vice President Joe Biden and his son during his calls with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and that he has no objections to transcripts of his calls being released. 

Pence also said he has “no objection” to releasing transcripts of his own calls with Zelensky. 

“We’re discussing that with White House counsel as we speak,” Pence said. 

Pence is in Iowa to push for passage of the President’s trade agreement with Mexico and Canada, and to attend a political function for Republican Sen. Joni Ernst. Pence made the comments to reporters in Iowa at Manning Farms in Waukee.

Podcast: John Dean compares the current impeachment drama to the Watergate era

CNN Law Enforcement Analyst Josh Campbell covers the White House’s blistering letter to House Democrats and more on the latest episode of “The Daily DC: Impeachment Watch.”

In the letter to the House, the White House claims President Trump’s due process rights have been circumvented without a vote and that Trump has no choice but to not cooperate.

Campbell will also look at:

  • Why the House is not voting to authorize a formal impeachment inquiry
  • Former GOP congressman Trey Gowdy, who was retained by the White House as outside counsel in the House impeachment inquiry
  • A trio of polls showing Americans support an impeachment inquiry – but they are not sold on the idea of removing Trump from office
  • The latest report detailing a White House official’s reaction to Trump’s July phone call with Ukraine’s president. The official who listened in on the call reportedly characterized the conversation as “crazy,” “frightening” and was described as “shaken” by the call.

Campbell is joined by CNN senior political reporter Nia-Malika Henderson and John Dean, a CNN contributor and former White House counsel to Richard Nixon.

In today’s episode, Dean compares the current impeachment drama to the Watergate era.

Listen to the podcast here.

Whistleblower's attorney releases statement addressing allegations of political bias

Mark Zaid, an attorney for the anonymous whistleblower, issued a statement today addressing allegations of “bias” against his client after reports surfaced claiming the individual had professional ties to a 2020 presidential candidate.

CNN previously reported that the whistleblower is a registered Democrat. The whistleblower’s legal team has consistently argued that efforts to highlight the political affiliation of their client is part of an effort to distract from the facts of the complaint.

Zaid called the identity of the whistleblower “irrelevant” to the ongoing impeachment investigation.

More on the whistleblower: The impeachment investigation was set in motion by the whistleblower complaint, which contains allegations that President Trump sought Ukraine’s help investigating his political opponent and the White House tried to cover it up.

The timing of that meeting remains unclear, but sources told CNN that there are discussions about interviewing the whistleblower in secret with certain members of the House Intelligence Committee in an effort to protect the whistleblower’s anonymity. Various options are being considered, including bringing the witness into a secure facility in the Capitol through passages that are off limits to the press. Holding the meeting off-site is also being discussed.

CNN’s Manu Raju, Jeremy Herb and Lauren Fox contributed to this story

Democrats plot next phase of impeachment inquiry

House Democrats are preparing a flurry of subpoenas in the face of President Trump administration’s stonewalling of their impeachment investigation.

The preparations are happening amid a new debate within the Democratic caucus to hold a vote to formally authorize the inquiry in order to call the White House’s bluff, according to Democratic sources.

In the face of the White House letter refusing to cooperate with their probe, Democrats expect they are likely done with any voluntary interviews for most witnesses, according to multiple Democratic sources.

A small but influential group of Democrats privately and publicly tell CNN that it makes sense to hold an impeachment inquiry vote — something House Republicans have demanded — arguing it would derail the White House’s argument that the impeachment inquiry is “invalid” because there’s been no House vote formally authorizing the probe.

Democrats are threatening to send subpoenas to associates of Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer, and considering them for current State Department officials, including the former US Ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch who is scheduled to appear for an interview Friday. There are new concerns Yovanovitch won’t appear given that she is still a State Department employee and could face backlash internally if she were to appear voluntarily.

When could we see an impeachment vote: There is growing pressure to move to impeach Trump as soon as Thanksgiving, but at the same time House Democratic leaders want to appear as they are methodically collecting evidence over what they view is an abuse of power by Trump to urge the Ukranian government to investigate his potential political rival, former Vice President Joe Biden, at the same time as US aid to the country had been stalled.

CNN’s Zachary Cohen contributed to this report.

Trump says he'll participate in impeachment inquiry "if the rules are fair"

Asked if he would then cooperate with Democrats if the House went ahead and held a vote on impeachment, President Trump said, “We would, if they give us our rights.”

Trump was speaking following an executive order signing at the White House.

Echoing a point that the White House made in a letter sent to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi yesterday, Trump said he wants the Democrats running the impeachment inquiry to “give us our lawyers” to be able to question witnesses. He added that House Democrats have “eviscerated the rules” and “they don’t give us any fair play.”

On the whistleblower, Trump said the individual told a “false story” that “bore no relationship” to what happened on the July 25 phone call with the Ukrainian president. The Inspector General of the Intelligence Community found the whistleblower’s complaint credible.

Asked to clarify if he would participate if the House held an impeachment vote and it passed, Trump said, “Yeah, if the rules are fair…if Republicans get a fair shake.”

The President also anticipated that the impeachment inquiry would eventually be challenged to the Supreme Court.

"I did nothing wrong": Trump responds to Joe Biden's call for impeachment

President Trump has characterized former Vice President Joe Biden’s call for his impeachment as “pathetic.”

The President took to Twitter this afternoon after Biden called for Trump’s impeachment at a rally in Rochester, New Hampshire today.

Some context: Biden’s comments in New Hampshire included a call for the preservation of “our Constitution, our democracy, our basic integrity.”

Read Trump’s tweet below:

Joe Biden calls for Trump's impeachment

Former Vice President Joe Biden called for President Trump’s impeachment today for the first time at a rally in Rochester, New Hampshire.

“With his words, and his actions, President Trump has indicted himself by obstructing justice, refusing to comply with the congressional inquiry. He’s already convicted himself in full view of the world and the American people,” Biden said.

Biden went on to say that Trump thinks “he can and will get away with anything he does.”

“He shooting holes in the Constitution. And we cannot let him get away with it,” the former vice president said.

Biden has been at the center of the Ukraine controversy. Trump has repeated an unproven accusation that claims that Biden was improperly trying to help Hunter, who served on the board of a Ukrainian natural gas company, when the then-vice president pressured the Ukrainian government to fire the country’s prosecutor general.

There is no evidence of wrongdoing by either Joe or Hunter Biden.

Trump is tweeting about impeachment polls. Here's what the latest survey says.

President Trump is back to tweeting about impeachment — this time to discuss polls on impeachment.

Trump does not say to what poll he is referring, but most reputable polls that have been released are well above that mark.

A Washington Post poll Tuesday found that 25 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents support an impeachment inquiry.

That poll also says that a majority of Americans say they endorse the decision by House Democrats to begin an impeachment inquiry of President Trump.

Nearly half of all adults also say the House should take the additional step of recommending that the President be removed from office.        

GO DEEPER

Majority of Americans support beginning an impeachment inquiry, new poll shows
Trump’s focus on his base may not help him with impeachment inquiry
Impeachment probe goes beyond Ukraine to lying and obstruction of justice, House lawyer says
Subpoenas to be issued in impeachment inquiry following blocking of ambassador deposition
Why Democrats aren’t planning to vote on an impeachment inquiry
Everything that just happened in the impeachment inquiry

GO DEEPER

Majority of Americans support beginning an impeachment inquiry, new poll shows
Trump’s focus on his base may not help him with impeachment inquiry
Impeachment probe goes beyond Ukraine to lying and obstruction of justice, House lawyer says
Subpoenas to be issued in impeachment inquiry following blocking of ambassador deposition
Why Democrats aren’t planning to vote on an impeachment inquiry
Everything that just happened in the impeachment inquiry