Democrats cheer impeachment probe despite political risk

Democrats cheer impeachment probe despite political risk

by Joseph Anthony
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US President Donald Trump

Democrats backing an impeachment investigation targeting President Donald Trump are prepared to take the electoral risks of such a move amid indications that a key whistleblower document could soon be made public.

There had been concerns among Democrats that the probe could jeopardise their House majority and alienate the suburban voters who have recently warmed to the party and who will be vital to defeating Mr Trump next autumn.

The president has repeatedly suggested he is being subjected to a witch hunt.

But a growing consensus is emerging among anxious Democrats: The risks are worth it.

Democrats were emboldened by Wednesdayโ€™s release of a rough transcript of Mr Trumpโ€™s July call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, which confirmed the Republican president repeatedly asked a foreign power to investigate his leading Democratic political rival, Joe Biden.

โ€œThe guy has got to be stopped,โ€ said Democratic former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe, who had previously urged Democrats to move cautiously on impeachment because the Republican-led Senate would almost certainly reject articles of impeachment.

โ€œThis is a president using presidential power to invite a foreign government to come into our country and interfere with our democracy,โ€ Mr McAuliffe continued. โ€œThis is too much.โ€

Democrats will face tremendous political peril over the next year, however โ€“ a fact underscored by a far more cautious approach from the Democratic governors of Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, who declined on Wednesday to endorse House Speaker Nancy Pelosiโ€™s approach.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a former congressman, called details of Mr Trumpโ€™s phone call โ€œdeeply troubling,โ€ but said impeachment may not be the way to go.

โ€œIt may not be politically good to do because I think at this point I, like many Minnesotans, am so sick and tired of the dysfunction in DC,โ€ he told reporters.

While Congressโ€™ timeline is unclear, the impeachment inquiry may well run simultaneously with the Democratic Partyโ€™s primary election calendar. The first primary votes are scheduled in early February.

Meanwhile, acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire is set to speak publicly for the first time about a secret whistleblower complaint involving Mr Trump as House Democrats who have read the document say it is โ€œdeeply disturbingโ€.

Mr Maguire is not expected to reveal many details about the substance of the complaint when he gives evidence before the House intelligence committee on Thursday morning, but House Democrats who are now mulling Mr Trumpโ€™s impeachment are hoping he will explain why he withheld it from Congress for weeks.

The complaint from an intelligence community whistleblower, the document which is at the centre the Trump-Ukraine firestorm, was made available to members of House and Senate intelligence committees on Wednesday after Mr Maguire had initially determined they could not see it.

Some are suggesting it could be made public as soon as Thursday.

Broadly speaking, the impeachment proceedings will serve as a constant reminder to voters across the political spectrum that Democrats are actively using one of the most sacred powers available to Congress to pursue Mr Trump.

The move is justified but inherently โ€œdangerous,โ€ said Bill Burton, a former adviser to President Barack Obama.

โ€œNobody knows how the politics are going to play out, which is why itโ€™s so honourable that Speaker Pelosi is moving forward,โ€ Mr Burton said.

โ€œThere comes a tipping point where Congress needs to do its job when thereโ€™s such blatant abuse of power.โ€

Strategists in both parties pointed to the electoral backlash against the Republican Party after House Republicans voted to impeach President Bill Clinton in 1998 for obstructing the investigation into his extramarital affair.

Republicans nearly lost their House majority in the next election.

And Democrats, having won a narrow House majority less than two years ago, must now spend the next 14 months protecting vulnerable freshmen in pro-Trump districts to preserve their grip on at least one chamber of Congress.

Polling on impeachment has never been with the Democratsโ€™ new position.

Multiple polls show that a majority of Americans have consistently opposed impeaching Mr Trump.

A Quinnipiac University poll released in mid-July, for example, found that 60% of registered voters opposed impeachment proceedings that could lead to Mr Trumpโ€™s removal from office; the opposition included 29% of Democrats and 62% of independents.

The context has changed, however.

Previous polling was generally related to the exhaustive investigation into whether Trump conspired with Russia to influence the 2016 election.

This one hinges on Mr Trumpโ€™s effort to do the same with Ukraine heading into 2020.

The rough transcript released Wednesday leaves no doubt Mr Trump was asking the Ukrainian president to investigate Mr Biden and Mr Bidenโ€™s son, who served on the board of a Ukrainian energy company while his father was vice-president.

And while Democrats were outraged by details of the call, the new facts did little to sway Republican officials.

Utah Senator Mitt Romney was among the few high-profile Republicans on Capitol Hill to raise concerns, calling the rough transcript โ€œdeeply troublingโ€.

The vast majority of his Republican colleagues defended Mr Trumpโ€™s behaviour.

REUTERS

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