Republican defenders mostly silent, with two vivid exceptions, as at least one additional whistleblower steps forward
As Donald Trump strived to enforce message discipline among Republicans in the face of a building threat that he will be impeached, new forces beyond the US president’s control appeared likely to accelerate the congressional impeachment inquiry further in the coming week.
At least one additional whistleblower has stepped forward to describe an alleged scheme by Trump to extort Ukraine for dirt on Democratic 2020 presidential rival Joe Biden, the individual’s lawyer announced.
Congress is preparing to take testimony on Tuesday from a major figure in the Ukraine scandal, Gordon Sondland, a wealthy hotelier and major Trump donor who was made US ambassador to the European Union.
Similar testimony last week by former Ukrainian envoy Kurt Volker led to the disclosure of a damaging series of text messages further implicating Trump in the scandal.
And Trump’s would-be defenders in the Republican ranks, with the
notable exception of two figures who themselves are deeply implicated in
the Ukraine affair – secretary of state Mike Pompeo and Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani
– have fallen mostly silent. No Trump defender from the White House
appeared on the US Sunday morning news shows, nor did any members of the
congressional Republican leadership.At least one additional whistleblower has stepped forward to describe an alleged scheme by Trump to extort Ukraine for dirt on Democratic 2020 presidential rival Joe Biden, the individual’s lawyer announced.
Congress is preparing to take testimony on Tuesday from a major figure in the Ukraine scandal, Gordon Sondland, a wealthy hotelier and major Trump donor who was made US ambassador to the European Union.
Similar testimony last week by former Ukrainian envoy Kurt Volker led to the disclosure of a damaging series of text messages further implicating Trump in the scandal.
Trump’s course of self-defense, meanwhile, appeared to be increasingly erratic. The president told House Republicans that his reportedly outgoing energy secretary, Rick Perry, was the secret Machiavelli behind a phone call Trump held with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, central to the scandal, Axios reported.
“Not a lot of people know this but, I didn’t even want to make the call,” Trump was quoted as saying. “The only reason I made the call was because Rick asked me to.”
A spokesperson said that Perry had urged Trump to speak with Ukraine about natural gas but not about the Bidens or a conspiracy theory about Ukrainian election tampering, which were the topics Trump raised on the July call.
“Lesson to all of you Trump aides,” tweeted Neera Tanden, president of the liberal Center for American Progress, “he’s taking you all down with him so you might as well get off the boat while you can.”
After a week in which his campaign seemed to dither in replying to Trump’s constant attacks, Biden published a pugilistic op-ed Saturday evening in the Washington Post declaring “enough is enough”. “You won’t destroy me, and you won’t destroy my family,” the piece concluded. “And come November 2020, I intend to beat you like a drum.”
News of at least one more whistleblower with direct knowledge of Trump administration interactions with Ukraine emerged Sunday morning. “I can confirm that my firm and my team represent multiple whistleblowers in connection to the underlying 12 August disclosure to the Intelligence Community Inspector General,” tweeted Andrew Bakaj. “No further comment at this time.”
Instead of making his habitual weekend golf outing, Trump scheduled a full day on Sunday inside the White House, where he spent the morning tweeting outrage directed at Democrats and at Mitt Romney, the sole Republican senator so far to have voiced clear criticism of Trump’s Ukraine dealings.
“The Democrats are lucky that they don’t have any Mitt Romney types,” Trump wrote, adding: “They stick together!”
Romney tweeted a photo of himself with his grandkids shopping for pumpkins.
But the efficacy of Trump’s efforts to keep Republicans onside in his defense was also visible at the weekend, with Pompeo telling reporters in Athens that it was the government’s “duty” to investigate a conservative conspiracy theory placing Ukraine instead of Russia at the heart of 2016 election tampering. That conspiracy theory has been debunked thoroughly.
Another Republican senator, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, scrambled on Sunday to make amends for his admission on Friday that he had heard the state department was trying to put together a deal in which military aid for Ukraine would be tied to Zelenskiy’s cooperation in Trump’s alleged conspiracy against Biden.
Johnson used an appearance on NBC News’ Meet the Press to become adamant about how Trump had personally told him there was no such linkage, and then, to the intense frustration of host Chuck Todd, Johnson peddled the Ukraine election tampering conspiracy. “What happened in 2016?” said Johnson. “Who set him up? Did things spring from Ukraine?”
Giuliani, relegated to Twitter, spouted a similar line that also managed to bring up Democratic opposition to the nomination of supreme court justice Brett Kavanaugh, a galvanizing issue for Republicans.
Despite Trump’s efforts, message discipline among Republicans was imperfect. Colin Powell, the former secretary of state under George W Bush, called the whistleblower a “patriot” in an appearance on CNN.
Meanwhile the former Republican congressman Joe Walsh, who has mounted a primary run against Trump, accused Trump of betrayal.
“This president deserves to be impeached,” Walsh said on CNN’s State of the Union. “This president betrayed his country again this week. There is enough we know now to vote to impeach this president. He stood on the White House lawn and told two foreign governments to interfere in our election. Donald Trump is a traitor.”
Minnesota Senator and Democratic 2020 election candidate Amy Klobuchar amplified that message, comparing the Ukraine scandal to Watergate.
“This is impeachable,” Klobuchar told CNN. “He’s acting like a global gangster, going to one leader after another trying to get dirt on his political opponent. I consider that a violation of our laws.”
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