GOP Stands By Trump, Gingerly, After Diplomat’s Testimony

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House Republicans gather for a news conference after Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Laura Cooper arrived for a closed door meeting to testify as part of the House impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2019, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

ASHINGTON (AP) — They pleaded ignorance, saying they’d not read the diplomat’s damning statement. They condemned the Democrats’ tactics as unfair. They complained that the allegations against President Donald Trump rested on second- or third-hand evidence.

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Wednesday was a day of careful counterargument by congressional Republicans, the day after America’s top envoy in Ukraine gave House impeachment investigators an explosive, detailed roadmap of Trump’s drive to squeeze that country’s leaders for damaging information about his Democratic political rivals.

Most Republicans were still standing by Trump but in delicately calibrated ways after Tuesday’s closed-door testimony by acting ambassador William Taylor. And as lawmakers struggled to balance support for Trump with uncertainty over what might still emerge, some were willing to acknowledge the strains they were facing.

Asked if Taylor’s testimony was a rough day for the White House and Republicans, No. 2 Senate GOP leader John Thune of South Dakota said, “Probably one of many.”

“Obviously, we have a lot of incoming right now,” Thune said. “That’s the nature of the beast.”

White House officials, who have been treating unified Republican support for Trump as a given, have grown increasingly fearful of defections in a potential impeachment vote by the Democratic House and even in an eventual trial in the Republican Senate.

While officials don’t believe there will be enough votes to remove the Republican president, as Democrats hope, the West Wing believes more must be done to shore up party support to avoid embarrassment and genuine political peril.

Some Trump allies also believe the White House must directly address the increasingly troubling revelations. They note that as more Trump appointees offer disparaging information to Congress, he will have increasing difficulty arguing simply that he is the target of a new “witch hunt.”

Several of these concerned supporters spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the growing private worries.

White House officials said they have added a regular call with select GOP lawmakers to discuss impeachment strategy, plus more meetings with Republicans at the White House and Camp David. They said communications teams from the White House and Congress coordinate three times a week with phone calls.

But there still are complaints from Capitol Hill about a lack of a sophisticated messaging strategy.

Two GOP aides, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal tactics, said White House coordination has been insufficient. They cited a lack of daily emails or White House briefings of reporters from which lawmakers could take a daily messaging cue.

Via tweet, Trump has asserted that witnesses haven’t said the Ukrainians were aware that military aid was being withheld, thus clearing him of accusations that he was insisting on a trade-off for political dirt.

“You can’t have a quid pro quo with no quo,” he quoted Rep. John Ratcliffe, R-Texas, as telling Fox News.

However, The Associated Press and others have reported that Ukrainian leaders were indeed aware of the threat of losing aid that Ukraine needed to counter Russian military efforts. Closed-door testimony has shown that new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy was worried that a White House meeting he desired with Trump was in jeopardy.

Trump lashed out Wednesday at critical members of his own party, tweeting, “Never Trumper Republicans” are “in certain ways worse and more dangerous for our Country than the Do Nothing Democrats.”

“They are human scum!” he fumed.

Reports of Taylor’s testimony led most newscasts, websites and newspapers late Tuesday and Wednesday. But underscoring the desire of Republicans to avoid focusing on the allegations about Trump’s actions, many asserted ignorance of what Taylor had said.

“I didn’t see it, I didn’t hear it and I’m not going to take a third-party description of it,” said Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho.

Taylor detailed conversations in which he said administration officials told him Trump was conditioning Ukrainian military aid and an Oval Office visit coveted by Zelenskiy on Ukraine probing Democrat Joe Biden and his son and allegations of interference in the 2016 election.

Taylor is a career diplomat who has served overseas for presidents of both major political parties. Under Trump, he was appointed to take charge of the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv earlier this year after Trump had the ambassador removed.

Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who challenged Trump for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, called Taylor’s testimony “just very devastating.”

Kasich, also a nine-term congressman, said he has noticed “a couple cracks” in the Republican wall that’s stood up for Trump and against impeachment.

“There’s no surprise in the fact, in an era of tribalism, that there is sort of a solid wall, (a wall) that appears to be getting weaker, in a way,” he said. “This is serious stuff.”

The GOP drew more attention to the secrecy on Wednesday when around two dozen House Republicans not directly involved in the investigation barged into a deposition of a Defense Department official. The move delayed the day’s interview by five hours and drew a slap from Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who called the tactic “nuts.”

Much of the House inquiry has unfolded behind the closed doors of secure offices in the Capitol Visitors Center. Alongside the Democrats, GOP members of the three House committees heading the investigation have been in the room as diplomats and other officials have testified. Democrats have said they expect to hold public hearings later in the process.

One administration official said Trump was aware of and encouraged the House effort to object to the secrecy of the impeachment proceedings Wednesday. That official was not authorized to discuss the issue by name and commented only on condition of anonymity.

In Taylor’s 15-page opening statement obtained by the AP and other news organizations, the diplomat named administration officials who he said told him Trump had demanded of the Ukrainians an investigation of Burisma, a Ukrainian gas company that once employed the son of former Vice President Biden. The elder Biden is running for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

Trump also wanted Ukraine to probe a conspiracy theory about a Democratic computer server that was hacked during the 2016 presidential election.

Trump has also complained repeatedly about the House process. He has used that argument to justify his order for administration officials not to comply with requests for documents and interviews.

Some continue to show up — under House subpoena. Yet Trump’s officials, sticking to their guns, are counting on his complaints to resonate with voters next year.


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GoldnMedina
GoldnMedina
4 years ago

‘Acting’ Ambassador Taylor had the GUTS to testify the TRUTH about sinister trump and crazy Rudy’s efforts to hold aid from Ukraine in exchange for ‘dirt’ on a political opponent. Why is trump telling his people NOT to testify? What is the vile rasha afraid of? The TRUTH? IMPEACH SOON.

Jewishguy
Jewishguy
4 years ago

If you read the testimony it’s more partisan nonsense. No direct knowledge, anti trump bias. The reason it’s all closed door is to make the narrative whatever the Democrats want. Trump is a great president and God should bless him

Stop the democrats corrupt coup attempt
Stop the democrats corrupt coup attempt
4 years ago

More drivel by the fake news media the statement was leaked by the corrupt coup attempting democrats without any of the actual testimony and it’s all 3rd or 4th hand information

Honest
Honest
4 years ago

Read the pro-Trump comments here (all conspiracy, outright lies, and insults) and it is easy to see why Independents that previously stood by Trump are starting to walk-back their support. They are a key voting bloc in elections that will determine the outcome of all this. Even if conviction does not happen in the senate, if the GOP loses the support of independents, this country will take a massive swing to the left in upcoming elections.

Nachum
Nachum
4 years ago

In D.C., there exists “the Potomac Two Step”, where one hand washes the other. It has been that way, forever. There is no accountability, anymore, even when politicians, and non-politicians are caught red handed. In any event, I really don’t think that Trump’s impeachment is going to increase his popularity, with his base, or with independents or undecided voters. On the contrary, I think that it will weaken his support, no matter how good the economy is doing. At this point, there is no guarantee that Trump will be reelected next year, despite Archy Bunker’s prediction of a victory.

Ronald Reagan's Ghost
Ronald Reagan's Ghost
4 years ago

To all you Trumpanzees, the actual impeachment will be televised for all to see. All that’s going on is a preliminary investigation. The next step is for the House to hold hearings and if they vote to impeach the Senate is the jury.
From the public statements that have come from the witnesses, the President, Mulvaney, Guiliani it certainly seems that there were impeachable offenses committed by Trump. No matter what you think of Trump, the law is the law. I was always told “if you do the crime, be prepared to do time”.
If impeached and removed from office all of the other legal proceedings against Mr Trump can proceed.
I think he’ll resign from office citing health reasons rather than be convicted by the Senate.

Nachum
Nachum
4 years ago

The Senate will not have the necessary two thirds majority to convict Trump. The framers of the Constitution made it just about impossible to successfully impeach a President with a conviction. In fact, in 1868, Andrew Johnson was saved by one vote. However, his party would not nominate him for a second term. The framers of the Constitution should have required a simple majority vote in the Senate to convict. There has to be nineteen Republican Senators to convict Trump; it will never happen, because they don’t have the guts to go against the Republican party. Many of them are running for reelection in red states, and they know that they will get voted out of office, if they vote to convict, no matter how convincing the evidence is. I’m sure that Trump will survive conviction in the Senate. However, whether or not he is reelected is another story. The last time, he only won a majority of the electoral vote, because of 80,000 votes in two key states (PA, and Michigan).

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
4 years ago

There is little doubt our President is a crook. Now we must decide if we are OK with that. Many people seem pretty relaxed with the concept.