ABC News: Good Morning America: Bolton Emerges as Impeachment Wild-Card, Putting Pressure on GOP to Allow Witnesses: ANALYSIS

The following is an excellent article written by Anne Flaherty on the ABC News: Good Morning America website on January 7, 2020 titled “Bolton Emerges as Impeachment Wild-Card, Putting Pressure on GOP to Allow Witnesses: ANALYSIS” and I quote:

“Bolton emerges as impeachment trial wild-card, putting pressure on GOP to allow witnesses: ANALYSIS”

John Bolton says he’s prepared to testify in impeachment trial

John Bolton says he’s prepared to testify in impeachment trial

ABC News logo

By Anne Flaherty


Share —

Get GMA delivered to your inbox every morning — Sign up for our daily newsletter.SIGN ME UP!Read the Latest →By providing my email address, I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy

John Bolton privately called Rudy Giuliani a “hand grenade,” compared Giuliani’s dealings in Ukraine to a “drug deal” being cooked up inside the White House, and repeatedly directed his staff to report their concerns to legal counsel.

He also is one of the few people – besides President Donald Trump himself — who can probably answer the million-dollar question implied in a July 25 phone call to Ukraine’s president but left unresolved by the weeks-long House impeachment inquiry: Did Trump hold almost $400 million in military assistance for Ukraine because of he was skeptical of its anti-corruption efforts? Or was the president waiting to hear Ukraine announce the investigation he wanted into Democrat Joe Biden?

PHOTO: U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton walks to an interview outside the White House in Washington, March 5, 2019.

Leah Millis/ReutersU.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton walks to an interview outside the White House in Washington, March 5, 2019.

Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser, now says he’s willing to testify before the Senate – changing the political calculus in what’s become a game of chicken between Democrats and Republicans on a pending impeachment trial and emerging as the first potential wild-card in the upcoming proceedings.MORE: ‘You have to ask Rudy’: 5 key things to know about Rudy Giuliani’s involvement in the Ukraine affair

Bolton’s unexpected offer to testify puts new pressure on Republicans to agree to hear from witnesses in the trial. Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell has so far rebuffed the idea in favor of a speedy trial expected to exonerate the president.

McConnell remained unmoved Monday.

“The Senate does not just bob along on the currents of every news cycle,” he told his colleagues on the Senate floor shortly after Bolton’s announcement and advising against allowing Democrats to treat the trial as a “political toy.”

But other Republicans signaled that they wouldn’t stand in the way of Bolton testifying – a move that could crack open the trial to other witnesses testimony and demands for fresh documents. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said he would try to force a vote on calling Bolton and others to testify.

Because of Senate rules and the 53-47 party split, Democrats need only four Republicans to join them in supporting a motion for witnesses or to subpoena documents. That narrow split has put all eyes on more moderate or vulnerable Republicans, like Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah and Cory Gardner of Colorado.MORE: Schumer cites Bolton as reason for key Republicans to join Democrats’ demand for Senate trial witnesses

“Now, it’s up to every senator … every senator will have a say – which of the two of us wins out? Will we have a fair trial or a cover-up?” Schumer, D-N.Y., said Monday.

While it’s considered highly unlikely that enough Republicans will break from their party to oust Trump – two thirds of the Senate would be needed to remove the president from office – only 51 votes are needed to demand witnesses or documents.

“When the time comes, if 51 senators want to hear Ambassador Bolton, I think that’s fine,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas.

“My guess is this could help the president as much as anything because what I think Bolton could say is that this is as much a disagreement over the way foreign policy is being conducted. There’s no crime being charged,” Cornyn added.

Romney, the Utah Republican and Trump’s former political opponent, said Monday, “Assuming there is a Senate trial, I would like to hear from John Bolton.”

“I’d like to hear what John Bolton has to say. He has some firsthand information. And I think it’d be helpful to be able to hear it,” he told reporters. As for supporting a subpoena, Romney said,“The process, I’m not sure of at this stage.”

PHOTO: National Security Adviser John Bolton listens to U.S. President Donald Trump speak in the Oval Office of the White House, April 9, 2019, in Washington.

Alex Wong/Getty Images, FILENational Security Adviser John Bolton listens to U.S. President Donald Trump speak in the Oval Office of the White House, April 9, 2019, in Washington.

Bolton has emerged as one of the most intriguing characters in the impeachment saga. Known for his extreme viewpoints on national security foreign policy – he has long advocated for “regime change” in Iran, which critics say is akin to declaring war on the Islamic nation – Trump last September referred to Bolton as “Mr. Tough Guy” and said he asked him to resign over some “very big mistakes.”

“He wasn’t getting along with people in the administration that I consider very important,” Trump said at the time.MORE: Trump calls for speedy end to impeachment amid escalating tensions with Iran

ABC News Politics@ABCPolitics

President Trump says he got along “very well” with John Bolton, but “he made some very big mistakes.”

“He wasn’t getting along with people in the administration that I consider very important,” he adds https://abcn.ws/2m7TLPm 2511:21 AM – Sep 11, 2019Twitter Ads info and privacy64 people are talking about this

While Bolton had been known to clash with other administration officials, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, unknown at the time was the extent to which the then-national security adviser was fending off an effort by Trump’s personal friend and attorney, Rudy Giuliani, to pressure Ukraine to investigate Biden and Biden’s son, Hunter.

PHOTO: Former White House national security aide Fiona Hill, and David Holmes, a U.S. diplomat in Ukraine, right, testify before the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Nov. 21, 2019.

Manuel Balce Ceneta/APFormer White House national security aide Fiona Hill, and David Holmes, a U.S. diplomat in Ukraine, right, testify before the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Nov. 21, 2019.

Following a meeting with high-level diplomats from Ukraine at the White House, Bolton’s aide Fiona Hill said he told her to relay a message on his behalf to White House legal counsel.

“I am not part of whatever drug deal Sondland and (acting White House Chief of Staff Mick) Mulvaney are cooking up,” Hill testified before the House last fall.

Hill also testified to raising her objections to Bolton about a “smear campaign” launched by Giuliani targeting Marie Yovanovitch, the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine at the time. Hill said she asked Bolton if there was anything they could do.

Bolton, “basically indicated with body language that there was nothing much that we could do about it,” Hill testified. “And he then, in the course of that discussion, he said, that Rudy Giuliani was a hand grenade that was going to blow everybody up.”

PHOTO: Rudy Giuliani in an interview with ABC News Chief Anchor George Stephanopoulos on "This Week," June 3, 2018.

Rudy Giuliani in an interview with ABC News Chief Anchor George Stephanopoulos on “This Week,” June 3, 2018.

Around the same time Bolton stepped down – he insisted he resigned on his own accord and was never asked to leave – House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., was pressing the administration for details about a whistleblower complaint on Ukraine. It remains unclear whether Bolton’s decision to leave was in any way tied to his opposition to Giuliani’s efforts in Ukraine.(MORE: Trump says he split with ‘Mr. Tough Guy’ Bolton over ‘very big mistakes’)

Bolton was never subpoenaed by House Democrats. The White House declined to cooperate with the House inquiry, and while some aides like Hill agreed to testify anyway, Trump’s top advisers like Mulvaney and Vice President Mike Pence ignored congressional requests.

House Democrats opted to move ahead with their inquiry and vote, rather than wait for the courts to weigh in on whether Trump’s top aides should be forced to comply with testimony.

Now the question becomes whether the Senate can force the issue again, particularly as new evidence trickles out. Last week, new emails emerged from a top Pentagon budget official and the White House budget office that suggested the president personally retained the hold on aid despite repeated warnings from the Pentagon that withholding aid was potentially illegal.MORE: Key takeaways from day 5 of the public impeachment hearings with Fiona Hill and David Holmes

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has put off handing over articles of impeachment – a necessary procedural move to kick off a Senate trial – until more is known about how the Senate trial will be structured. The move baffled Republicans who said they were happy to drop the matter and move on. But it also frustrated Trump and his allies who are eager for a favorable trial for Trump by the Republican majority.

But the question now is whether vulnerable or moderate GOP senators will side with Democrats without a procedural agreement reached by McConnell and Schumer.

Collins said she still hopes the two sides can reach an agreement on the rules.

On Bolton, Collins – who is up for re-election this year – said: “There are a number of witnesses that may well be appropriate … of which he would certainly be one.”

ABC News’ Trish Turner and Mariam Khan contributed to this report.

(HOPEFULLY, IF THREE OR FOUR MORE REPUBLICAN SENATORS FOLLOW SUIT, WE’LL GET THE HEARING THAT 70% OF THE VOTERS WANT.

La Vern Isely, Progressive, Overtaxed, Independent Middle Class Taxpayer, Public Citizen Member, USAF Veteran, and Lifetime VFW Member

About tim074

I'm a retired dairy farmer that was a member of the National Farmer's Organization (NFO). Before going farming, I spent 4 years in the United States Air Force where I saved up enough money to get my down payment to go farming. I also enjoy writing and reading biographies and I write about myself as well as articles and excerpts I find interesting. I'm specifically interested in finances, particularly in the banking industry because if it wasn't for help from my local Community Bank, I never could have started farming which I was successful at. So, I'm real interested in the Small Business Administration and I know they are the ones creating jobs. I have been a member of Common Cause and am now a member of Public Citizen as well as AARP. I have, in the past, written over 150 articles on the Obama Blog (my.barackobama.com) and I'd like to tie these two sites together. I'm also on Twitter, MySpace and Facebook and find these outlets terrifically interesting particularly what many of these people did concerning the uprising in the Arab world. I believe this is a smaller world than we think it is and my goal is to try to bring people together to live in peace because management needs labor like labor needs management. Up to now, that hasn't been so easy to find.
This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment