Trump impeachment debate opens with fiery partisan battle

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WASHINGTON, Dec 12, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Democrats warned that US President
Donald Trump was on the verge of dictatorship while Republicans fiercely
defended his record at the opening of a stormy, historic debate on
impeachment charges Wednesday.

The parties held tightly to diametrically opposed views of Trump as they
weighed articles of impeachment at the beginning of a two-day debate.

Trump is alleged to have wielded the power of the presidency for personal
and political gain by pressuring Ukraine to interfere in the 2020 US
election.

There is little question about the outcome in the House Judiciary
Committee: by the end of the week the majority-Democrat panel is expected to
approve the charges and send them to the entire House of Representatives for
passage next week.

But lawmakers in the televised hearing appeared focused on speaking to
voters, whose sentiment will be crucial if, as expected, Trump goes on trial
in the US Senate in January.

In a grave voice, Democratic committee chairman Jerry Nadler opened the
hearing.

“Today we begin consideration of two articles of impeachment against
President Donald J. Trump,” he said.

“Taken together, the two articles charge President Trump with placing his
private political interests above our national security, above our free and
fair elections, and above our ability to hold public officials accountable,”
he said.

“If the president can first abuse his power and then stonewall all
congressional requests for information, Congress cannot fulfill its duty to
act as a check and balance against the Executive — and the president becomes
a dictator.”

– Charges ‘generic, vague’ –

Doug Collins, the senior Republican on the committee, argued that Democrats
have been seeking to impeach Trump ever since he came into office in January
2017, and have no clear case beyond “abuse of power.”

“It’s just generic vague statements,” Collins said.

“You go home and pick something you don’t like about the president, and
there’s your abuse of power.”

“This is as much about political expediency as it is anything else, and
that should never be an article of impeachment.”

Trump faces becoming only the third president in US history to be impeached
and placed on trial in the Senate.

He is accused of pressuring Ukraine for help against his Democratic
challenger Joe Biden ahead of next year’s national elections, and holding up
military aid to the country which it needed to face Russian aggression,
unless it did his bidding.

– Republicans stick behind Trump –

With the committee’s 40 members speaking one by one, alternating by party,
Republicans were united in claiming there was no evidence to support the
charges.

Jim Jordan said Democrats were simply refighting their 2016 election loss
and hated Trump.

“This is about one basic fact: the Democrats have never accepted the will
of the American people,” he said. “They don’t like the 63 million people who
voted for this president.”

But Democrats clung to statements of principles, warning not to let Trump
get away with inviting foreign interference in a US election.

“Will we hold the president accountable, or will we serve as his
accomplices?” asked Hank Johnson.

Most indications are that the Republican majority in the Senate will
ultimately protect Trump from conviction and removal.

But impeachment could mar his record as president and affect his reelection
chances in November 2020.

At a political rally in Hershey, Pennsylvania on Tuesday, he ridiculed the
charges.

“Everybody said, ‘This is impeachment light,'” Trump said.

“They’re impeaching me and there are no crimes. This has to be a first in
history. They’re impeaching me. You know why? Because they want to win an
election. And that’s the only way they can do it.”