BFF-08 After Mueller show, Democrats likely no closer to impeachment

250

ZCZC

BFF-08

US-POLITICS-MUELLER

After Mueller show, Democrats likely no closer to impeachment

WASHINGTON, July 26, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Former special counsel Robert
Mueller’s reticent testimony to Congress likely confirmed what many Democrats
had feared: if they want to end Donald Trump’s presidency, their best bet is
through next year’s election, not impeachment.

Mueller’s highly anticipated appearance Wednesday at back-to-back House
hearings delivered neither the viral moments nor the bombshell soundbites
that the anti-Trump crowd hoped would persuade skeptics or overwhelmingly
reshape public opinion.

The contents of Mueller’s remarks were damning, several Democrats said,
noting the former FBI director’s statements that the two-year investigation
of Russian election interference was “not a witch hunt,” and indeed found
substantial evidence of obstruction of justice.

But after Mueller’s flat one-word answers, seeming confusion about
questions and refusal to produce new information, hopes that the performance
would launch lawmakers on a path to impeachment had dimmed.

The 2020 election “is unquestionably the only way he gets removed from
office, so we can never lose sight of that,” House Intelligence Committee
chairman Adam Schiff, who presided over one of Mueller’s hearings, said
Thursday.

Even Democrat Al Green, who forced an unsuccessful House vote on articles
of impeachment last week following Trump’s racially charged attacks on four
liberal congresswomen, acknowledged Mueller’s appearance fell short of
expectations.

“There was no ‘aha’ moment because we’ve had the report and watched or
discussed the President’s impeachable actions ad nauseum,” Green said on
Twitter.

Ninety-five of the House’s 235 Democrats voted for Green’s measure. While
pro-impeachment legislators were hoping dozens would shift to their position,
just two more lawmakers publicly announced they now backed impeachment
proceedings.

House Democrat Lisa Blunt Rochester said she supports impeachment after
listening to Mueller declare that Trump stonewalled his investigation, failed
to tell the truth in written answers to questions, and likely could have been
charged with a crime without the Justice Department’s policy against
indicting a sitting president.

“Director Mueller has done his job. Now it’s time for Congress to do ours,”
she said.

House Democrat Karen Bass, an impeachment skeptic, said the hearing “didn’t
change me,” and that she wanted to proceed with ongoing House investigations.

“I also think that all of our leaders need to be on the same page,” she
said.

– Against impeachment –

They aren’t. According to Politico, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the top
Democrat in Congress, rebuffed an impeachment push by House Judiciary
Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, telling a closed-door meeting after
Mueller’s testimony that it was premature.

For months, Pelosi has tamped down impeachment calls, aware of how
dangerous such a vote would be for centrist Democrats in Republican-leaning
districts.

She has argued that the case should be ironclad before lawmakers launch
such a divisive process, especially given the likelihood it would die in the
Republican-led Senate.

Several 2020 presidential hopefuls support impeachment, including Senators
Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, Kamala Harris and Kirsten Gillibrand.

But Pelosi has highlighted the need for the White House candidates to focus
on the economy and health care — kitchen table issues that propelled
Democrats to their House majority last year — in order to help win back
working-class voters who tilted for Trump in 2016.

She is also concerned about public opinion polling showing that most
Americans are against impeachment, and has said unsuccessful proceedings
would allow Trump to claim exoneration, boosting his re-election bid.

But she made clear that she was not shutting the door, saying, “If we have
a case for impeachment, that’s the place we will have to go.”

– Election security –

Meanwhile, Pelosi is backing House investigations of Trump and his
administration, and is monitoring several court cases which could provide
potentially damning new evidence and testimony from the White House.

While Mueller failed to provide Democrats with their closing argument for
impeachment, he did issue a clarion call for election security, warning that
Russia was preparing more interference for 2020.

Even with current administration officials like FBI director Christopher
Wray recently warning lawmakers of active threats, Republicans have blocked
Democratic proposals to safeguard US elections.

The Democratic-led House passed legislation requiring voting systems to use
paper ballots and improve technical protections, but it has stalled in the
Senate.

Senate Democrats introduced an initiative requiring political campaigns to
report to federal authorities any election interference attempts by foreign
entities.

But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell blocked the measure Thursday,
calling it “a highly partisan bill” from lawmakers “hyping up a conspiracy
theory about President Trump and Russia.”

BSS/AFP/GMR/0856 hrs