Trump impeachment trial: Live updates and latest news | CNN Politics

Impeachment trial of President Trump

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Trump's defense team takes on the Bidens
02:34 - Source: CNN

Where things stand

  • The latest: President Trump’s legal team will continue their opening arguments tomorrow.
  • Next: The Senate is poised to debate whether to subpoena witnesses on or around Friday. If the vote fails, the Senate could vote to acquit President Trump then. If senators vote to have witnesses, the trial will continue.
  • Bolton manuscript: The New York Times reported Trump ordered former national security adviser John Bolton to keep military aid to Ukraine frozen in a bid to coerce political favors. Since the news broke, some GOP senators are considering the need to have witnesses at the trial.

Our live coverage has ended. Go here to read more about the impeachment trial of President Trump.

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The impeachment trial has ended for the day. Here's what happened.

President Trump’s defense team continued their opening arguments today in the impeachment trial as senators tackled questions about the need for witnesses.

In case you missed it, here are some of the highlights from today’s proceedings:

  • The John Bolton manuscript: Much of the attention on Capitol Hill focused on the Republican senators and how they are reacting to Sunday night’s New York Times bombshell that John Bolton’s draft manuscript says Trump told him US security assistance to Ukraine was conditioned on investigations into Democrats, including former Vice President Joe Biden.
  • Trump’s defense team reacts to the Bolton news: President Trump lawyer and Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz argued that Bolton’s accusations do not amount to an impeachable offense. “Let me repeat: Nothing in the Bolton revelations — even if true — would rise to the level of an abuse of power or an impeachable offense,” Dershowitz said.
  • GOP senators downplayed the Bolton manuscript: Republican Sen. John Cornyn downplayed the significance of Bolton’s revelation. Cornyn said the timing around this was suspicious and accused Democrats of having a “credibility problem.”
  • While others said they wouldn’t mind learning more from Bolton: GOP Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah reiterated demands to call for John Bolton to testify, saying he’s had discussions with some of his colleagues on the matter. GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham said today that he wants to see Bolton’s manuscript. “What we have to do here is evaluate the manuscript and see if it’s a reason to add to the record,” he said.
  • White House officials were blindsided: Bolton’s upcoming book blindsided senior White House officials and GOP senators who now want to know more about Bolton’s side of the story as laid out in his manuscript, multiple sources close to the process told CNN. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was not notified in advance about the unpublished manuscript, his spokesperson said.
  • It was Chief Justice John Roberts’ birthday: Chief Justice John Roberts celebrated his 65th birthday today and has been presiding over the Senate impeachment trial. Roberts also appeared briefly on the Supreme Court bench to swear in a roomful of military lawyers to the Supreme Court bar. Roberts was joined by five other members of the court. 
  • There was lots of note-taking: During the defense’s argument today, Republican senators and some Democrats took copious notes. Everyone appeared present and attentive. There were no absences. 
  • Trump defense team compares presidential impeachment to “domestic war”: Trump’s lawyer Kenneth Starr said in his remarks today, “Like war, impeachment is hell. Or, at least, presidential impeachment is hell.” 

The Senate has adjourned for the night

The Senate impeachment trial will resume at 1 p.m. ET tomorrow.

Trump attorney says nothing in Bolton manuscript "would rise to the level of an abuse of power"

After virtually ignoring the Bolton manuscript bombshell news through nearly eight hours of their presentation today, President Trump lawyer and Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz argued that John Bolton’s accusations do not amount to an impeachable offense.  

Earlier today, Jay Sekulow, the President’s private counsel, alluded to bombshell allegations over the weekend from former national security adviser John Bolton directly tying Ukraine aid to an investigation of the Bidens. But he suggested it would not be discussed by the team today.

“What we’ve done on Saturday is the pattern that we’re going to continue today as far as how we’re going to deal with the case. We deal with transcript evidence, we deal with publicly available information. We do not deal with speculation, allegations that are not based on evidentiary standards at all,” he said.

What’s this about: The New York Times reported Trump ordered Bolton to keep military aid to Ukraine frozen in a bid to coerce political favors. Since the news broke, some GOP senators are considering the need to have witnesses at the trial.

Dershowitz explains how he changed his mind about what's impeachable

During his remarks tonight, President Trump’s attorney Alan Dershowitz talked about how he saw the impeachments of Trump and Clinton as different — and how the charges against Trump led him to change his mind about what constitutes an impeachable offense by a president.

On former president Bill Clinton, Dershowitz said, “Clinton was accused of a crime, perjury, and so the issue in his case was not whether the Constitution requires a crime for impeachment, instead, the engine was whether Clinton’s alleged crime could be classified as a high crime in light of its personal nature.” 

He continued: “During the Clinton impeachment, I stated in an interview that I did not think that the technical crime was required but that I did think that abusing trust could be considered.” 

Dershowitz said that at the time of Clinton’s impeachment, he had not done “extensive research on that issue” of whether criminal behavior was required to impeach a president. “I simply accepted the academic consensus on an issue that was not on the front burner at the time,” he said.

With Trump, Dershowitz said his impeachment “directly raises the issue of whether criminal behavior is required.”

White House press secretary calls Bolton book "sad"

Grisham during a cabinet meeting on October 21, 2019.

Moments after Trump attorney Alan Dershowitz began remarks on the Senate floor, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham appeared briefly on Fox Business.

President Trump, she said, has been “very, very happy” with his legal team, touting a “strong team with decades of legal experience.”

On Bolton, Grisham called it “unfortunate” and “disappointing” that the former White House national security adviser is “clearly trying to sell a book,” noting that the preorder link was live moments after the New York Times story published.

She also questioned whether Bolton was telling the truth.

“We don’t even know if what’s in the book is going to be true,” she said, adding, “The President has made clear that none of the things in the book are true.”

Grisham repeatedly called it “sad.”

Republican senator says witness reciprocity deal is not something GOP is actively pursuing

The proposal for witness reciprocity is not something most GOP senators are actively pursuing and it is essentially a backup plan in case enough Republicans vote to hear witnesses, Republican Sen. Mike Braun said.

Earlier today: Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican from Pennsylvania, raised the “one for one” witness deal that would allow for one witness each to be called by both the Republican and Democratic sides in the Senate impeachment trial at the GOP conference lunch today, a source familiar told CNN. 

Braun also said the discussion in the lunch today on witnesses was tangential to the main discussion in the lunch which was about the upcoming question and answer process.

Trump attorney says President told him: "Do what you think is right" at trial

President Trump’s impeachment attorney Robert Ray concluded his opening remarks with what the President told him.

Ray added that he does not believe that Trump’s impeachment is in “the best interests of this country.”

Schiff: Trump and allies want to suppress Bolton testimony because they are "deathly afraid"

Asked about GOP Rep. Mark Meadows’s suggestion that the New York Times story on John Bolton was a coordinated leak from Democrats and if he was in any way involved in the leak, House impeachment manager Rep. Adam Schiff said he was not.

Schiff continued: “There seems to be a real shift in where the Republican senators are and I think it’s very hard for them to maintain that they wanted a fair trial, wanted to know all the facts when there’s a witness who said I’m ready, I’ve got something to say, we have an outline of what he has to say, it’s really hard to say we’re not going to hear that.”

Top House Democrat says they would consider bringing in Bolton if Senate doesn’t

Asked if the House would reconsider bringing in former White House national security adviser John Bolton if the Senate decides not call trial witnesses, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said they would consider it, but he wouldn’t speculate beyond that. 

The Senate is back in session

The Senate impeachment trial has resumed.

Robert Ray, a member of President Trump’s defense team, is delivering his opening arguments right now.

Trump ally suggests Bolton manuscript was leaked to convince GOP senators to call witnesses

Rep. Mark Meadows speaks with reporters in Washington on Monday.

Rep. Mark Meadows, a Republican from North Carolina and a stark defender of the President, suggested today that the John Bolton manuscript was leaked to convince GOP senators to vote for witnesses. He also said he’s not in favor of calling additional witnesses.

Meadows continued: “My Republican colleagues in the Senate are going to make up their own minds on whether or not to call witnesses, but this leak was designed for one purpose and one purpose only, and that was to try to manipulate the thinking of my Republican colleagues in the Senate to encourage them to open it up and provide for more witnesses,” he said.

“I’m not in favor of calling additional witnesses,” he added.

GOP senators say defense team "shredded" House impeachment case 

Sen. Mike Braun speaks to the press during a break in the impeachment trial on Monday.

GOP Sens. Ted Cruz, Mike Braun, John Barrasso and Joni Ernst spoke to reporters this evening, praising the defense team and discussing the possibility of witnesses. 

Cruz claimed that the defense team outlined “serious evidence of corruption involving Burisma.”

“I get that the press loves to obsess over the latest bombshell,” Cruz said of the New York Times report on John Bolton, downplaying the impact. “At the end of the day, it doesn’t impact the legal issue before the Senate. The legal issue before this Senate is whether a president has the authority to investigate corruption.” 

“If we get to witnesses, it will be a one-for-one or a two-for-two,” Braun said when asked about the possibility of reciprocity. 

“We’re going to decide Friday on witnesses,” Barrasso said. “It’s not going to be a one-sided issue.”

Trump is pleased with his defense team's performance, official says

President Trump watched parts of his defense team’s presentation today, a White House official said.

Trump is pleased with his defense team’s performance today, the official said.

Aides briefed Trump on portions of the trial he did not see, the official said. Meanwhile, sources close to the President’s legal team said they will be prepared in the event John Bolton testifies and that Trump reserves the right to assert executive privilege should his attorneys decide to take that approach. It’s up to the lawyers, sources said.

Trump has previously sounded cool to the idea of seeing Bolton testify, portraying it as a national security concern.

Schiff didn't react as President's team attacked him during their presentation

House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff has taken the same position throughout the defense counsel’s presentations — sitting sideways on the table to face the speaker directly, breaking his gaze only to take notes on his legal pad.

Schiff didn’t break his gaze as President’s Trump lawyer Eric Herschmann repeatedly turned his direction during the presentation to attack Schiff and the other managers, staring back at Herschmann without expression when he looked over.

Republican Sen. Mitt Romney also did not react when he was cited by Herschmann for his comment in a 2012 debate with President Barack Obama that Russia was the No. 1 geopolitical foe of the US. Romney looked straight ahead while the clip of Obama was played and his facial expression did not change.

When the Trump team played a video montage of Schiff, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and others saying it was urgent that they impeach the President, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell broke out a rare smile, while Sen. Ted Cruz chuckled.

Fact check: 4 things Trump's attorney left out of her arguments about Biden and Burisma

President Trump’s lawyer Pam Bondi played a video clip of former vice president Joe Biden recounting, at a 2018 event, how he had pressured Ukraine to fire its prosecutor general, Viktor Shokin.

Bondi claimed that Shokin was, at the time of the pressure in late 2015 and early 2016, “investigating Burisma,” the company where Biden’s son Hunter Biden sat on the board of directors.

Here are four key facts Bondi omitted:

1. Shokin’s former deputy, Vitaliy Kasko, said the investigation into Burisma and company owner Mykola Zlochevsky was inactive at the time of Joe Biden’s pressure in late 2015 and early 2016. A leading Ukrainian anti-corruption activist said the same.

2. Shokin was widely seen — by Ukrainian activists, US diplomats, European governments and the International Monetary Fund — as ineffective or corrupt. In a speech in 2015, Geoffrey Pyatt, then the US ambassador to Ukraine, castigated Shokin’s office for impeding the investigation of Burisma’s owner Zlochevsky. Pyatt called for people in Shokin’s office to be fired, “at minimum.” 

3. Biden was acting in accordance with official US policy. Because of Shokin’s reputation, the US and its allies believed that removing him would increase, not decrease, the chances of people like Zlochevsky being pursued.

4. Some Republican senators had also demanded changes to the prosecutor general’s office Shokin led.

Biden campaign slams defense team's presentation

Andrew Bates, campaign director for former vice president Joe Biden’s campaign, has issued a statement slamming President Trump’s attorney Pam Bondi’s presentation this afternoon.

Bondi outlined the issue of Hunter Biden’s involvement on the board of Burisma, a Ukrainian natural gas company, during her 30-minute presentation. 

“We didn’t realize that Breitbart was expanding into Ted Talk knockoffs. Here on Planet Earth, the conspiracy theory that Bondi repeated has been conclusively refuted,” Bates said in the statement.

He continued: “The New York Times calls it ‘debunked,’ The Wall Street Journal calls it ‘discredited,’ the AP calls it ‘incorrect,’ and The Washington Post Fact Checker calls it ‘a fountain of falsehoods.’ The diplomat that Trump himself appointed to lead his Ukraine policy has blasted it as ‘self serving’ and ‘not credible.’ Joe Biden was instrumental to a bipartisan and international anti-corruption victory. It’s no surprise that such a thing is anathema to President Trump.”

The Senate is taking a break for dinner

The Senate impeachment trial just took a 45-minute break for dinner.

After senators return from the break, President Trump’s defense team will resume their opening arguments.

Pelosi says the allegations in the Bolton manuscript are "no surprise"

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said the reported contents of John Bolton’s book came to her as “no surprise.”

She didn’t answer follow up questions.

GOP senator proposes "one-for-one" witness deal in the Senate impeachment trial, source says

Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican from Pennsylvania, raised the “one for one” witness deal that would allow for one witness each to be called by both the Republican and Democratic sides in the Senate impeachment trial at the GOP conference lunch today, a source familiar told CNN. 

This has been a topic of conversation among Senate GOP for sometime. 

The Washington Post first reported the Toomey idea this afternoon.

Both the White House and GOP leadership want this trial to end as soon as possible and not go down this route.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has no appetite for this, and this tactic will only be employed if they’re about to lose the witness vote. So this is the last resort.

Toomey’s office is declining to comment at the moment. 

GOP Sen. Mike Braun confirmed a discussion about the one-for-one trade on witnesses occurred at lunch today. Braun said that at the lunch, Republican senators indicated that if they do move forward on witnesses, Democrats need to be prepared for witnesses sought by the GOP. 

Trump defense team focuses on the Bidens

Pam Bondi, former Florida attorney general and a member of President Trump’s defense team, outlined the issue of Hunter Biden’s involvement on the board of Burisma, a Ukrainian natural gas company, during her 30-minute presentation.

This was the first direct reference to the Bidens during the defense team’s presentations.

House managers, she said, “repeatedly referenced” Biden and Burisma more than “400 times” during their presentations last week, “but they never gave you the full picture.”

“We would prefer not to be talking about this,” she claimed, “But the House managers have placed this squarely at issue, so we must address it.” 

Citing multiple news reports and testimony from State Department official George Kent and other witnesses, Bondi cast the company as corrupt and Biden’s involvement as a conflict of interest. She questioned his qualifications to serve on the board, an opportunity she called “nepotistic at best, nefarious at worst.”

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

Bondi noted that then-Vice President Joe Biden sought to remove Ukrainian prosecutor Victor Shokin, who was investigating Burisma. However, she did not note that Shokin was widely accused of corruption and a Shokin deputy has said the Burisma probe was dormant. 

“There was a basis to talk about this, to raise this issue, and that is enough,” Bondi said.

Watch part of the defense’s exhibit on Biden:

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