Senators are sworn in as Trump’s impeachment trial gets under way – video

Seven House impeachment managers delivered impeachment articles against the US president, Donald Trump, to the Senate, officially marking the opening of the trial.

Adam Schiff, the lead impeachment manager, read from impeachment resolution 755, impeaching Trump for high crimes and misdemeanours. The trial is scheduled to begin on January 21

Continue reading...

Impeachment trial opens as watchdog says Trump broke law on Ukraine

Government Accountability Office finds suspension of of military aid at president’s direction violated law

As the Senate opened an impeachment trial in which Donald Trump will stand charged with abusing the power of his office, the president was hit with new allegations of wrongdoing by an agency within Trump’s own administration.

The Government Accountability Office released a finding on Thursday morning that the suspension last year of military aid for Ukraine at Trump’s direction violated laws governing the disbursement of congressionally appropriated funds.

Continue reading...

Trump impeachment trial set to begin amid damaging new Ukraine revelations – live

House prosecutors to arrive at Senate to formally open trial as Lev Parnas tells reporters president was fully aware of efforts to pressure Ukraine

  • Help us cover the critical issues of 2020. Consider making a contribution

An independent government watchdog, the Government Accountability Office (GAO), said the White House budget office violated the law when it froze US military aid to Ukraine.

“Faithful execution of the law does not permit the president to substitute his own policy priorities for those that Congress has enacted into law,” the report said.

Yesterday, the House voted to send articles of impeachment to the Senate, setting in motion the third impeachment Senate trial in US history.

Here’s how that looks today:

Continue reading...

Trump impeachment: how the day unfolded as House sends articles to Senate – video

Donald Trump faces a trial after the House of Representatives voted to send articles of impeachment against him to the Senate. Here’s how a frantic day on Capitol Hill unfolded

Continue reading...

Trump impeachment: House votes to send articles to the Senate – live

More anecdotes from the highly-anticipated, A Very Stable Genius, written by the Washington Post journalists Philip Rucker and Carol Leonnig, have emerged today.

One section of the book claims the president doesn’t know about Pearl Harbor:

“Hey, John, what’s this all about? What’s this a tour of?” Trump asks his then-Chief of Staff John F. Kelly, as the men prepare to take a private tour of the USS Arizona Memorial, which commemorates the December 1941 Japanese surprise attack in the Pacific that pulled the United States into World War II.

“Trump had heard the phrase ‘Pearl Harbor’ and appeared to understand that he was visiting the scene of a historic battle, but he did not seem to know much else,” write the authors, later quoting a former senior White House adviser who concludes: “He was at times dangerously uninformed.”

Related: Trump 'abused' and 'harassed' Kirstjen Nielsen over border, new book reveals

It’s been (another) historic day on Capitol Hill - and the day is yet young. Stay tuned for an afternoon and evening of continuing drama in US politics.

Main events so far:

Continue reading...

Pelosi says Trump ‘can never erase’ impeachment as she names prosecutors – video

Nancy Pelosi, the speaker for the US House of Representatives, has vowed that Donald Trump will be ‘held to account’ as she named the Democrats who will prosecute the impeachment case against him in the Senate. The team includes women – two African Americans and one Latina – as well as the House intelligence chair, Adam Schiff, and the judiciary chair, Jerry Nadler

Continue reading...

Russian hackers targeted Burisma amid impeachment inquiry, cybersecurity firm says

A leak of stolen data could potentially affect the impeachment process and the US election contest

Russian military hackers tried to steal emails from the Ukrainian energy firm where Hunter Biden, the son of the Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden, had a seat on the board, a US cybersecurity firm said.

The energy company Burisma Holdings was at the center of attempts by president Donald Trump last July to pressure Ukrainian authorities to announce an investigation into the Bidens for purported corruption, an effort that has led to the Republican being impeached by the US House of Representatives on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

Continue reading...

Cory Booker ends 2020 presidential campaign – live updates

Booker emailed supporters announcing move to shutter his campaign after struggling with fundraising and failing to qualify for debates

Donald Trump is having a busy day on Twitter, including going after the Democrats over their reaction to the assassination of Gen Qassem Suleimani.

“The Fake News Media and their Democrat Partners are working hard to determine whether or not the future attack by terrorist Suleimani was ‘eminent’ [sic – he means “imminent”] or not, & was my team in agreement,” the president wrote, in a tweet that was deleted and reissued, spelling fixed.

Related: Esper contradicts Trump claim Iran planned attacks on four US embassies

The Democrats and the Fake News are trying to make terrorist Suleimani into a wonderful guy, only because I did what should have been done for 20 years. Anything I do, whether it’s the economy, military, or anything else, will be scorned by the Rafical [sic] Left, Do Nothing Democrats!

The corrupted Dems trying their best to come to the Ayatollah's rescue.#NancyPelosiFakeNews pic.twitter.com/a0ksPHeXCy

Related: Iranian police fired live rounds to disperse protesters, say witnesses

Senator Cory Booker announced Monday that he is suspending his presidential campaign.

He sent the following email to supporters announcing the move:

Friend,

Nearly one year ago, I got in the race for president because I believed to my core that the answer to the common pain Americans are feeling right now, the answer to Donald Trump’s hatred and division, is to reignite our spirit of common purpose to take on our biggest challenges and build a more just and fair country for everyone.

Continue reading...

Impeachment: Trump fumes as Pelosi prepares to send articles to the Senate

Whether or not Nancy Pelosi is the “absolute worst Speaker of the House in US history”, as Donald Trump insists, the Democrat said on Sunday her caucus will meet on Tuesday to decide when to transmit two articles of impeachment to the Senate for trial.

Related: John Bolton impeachment testimony will be blocked, Donald Trump says

Continue reading...

Trump impeachment: Senator Collins working to allow witnesses at trial – as it happened

Susan Collins and other Republicans open to allowing witnesses in impeachment trial, a key sticking point in impasse between House and Senate

  • Help us cover the critical issues of 2020. Consider making a contribution

Kari Paul here, logging off for the weekend! Here is a summary of the key events of the last few hours:

Two parents whose children were separated from them as a result of the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” border policies are suing the federal government for $12m, claiming the children were subject to abuse and neglect while in federal custody.

“The United States government tore these families apart pursuant to a cruel and unconstitutional policy: The government intended to inflict terror and harm on these small children and their fathers, as a means of deterring others from seeking to enter the United States”, said the lawsuit, which was filed Friday in U.S. District Court of Arizona.

According to the lawsuit, the fathers were separated from their children for more than two months, and the federal government gave little, if any, information regarding the location and safety of the children.

The families “suffered, and continue to suffer, physical, mental, and emotional harm,” the lawsuit states. More than a year after they were reunited, the lawsuit says the children exhibit symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder.

Continue reading...

Pelosi: I’ll send impeachment articles to Senate ‘when I’m ready’ – video

Nancy Pelosi says she wants to understand the parameters of a Senate trial before sending the articles of impeachment, but adds she does not plan to hold on to them indefinitely. 'I’ll send them over when I’m ready,' she says. 'And that’ll probably be soon.'

The Speaker says she is concerned that senators will not hold an impartial trial to determine whether Donald Trump should be removed from office

Continue reading...

Trump says ‘Iran appears to be standing down’ following missile strikes – live

US president declares additional economic sanctions on Iran but attempts to de-escalate crisis

The quartet of US secretary of state Mike Pompeo, the still relatively new defense secretary Mark Esper, chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff Mark Milley and the historically-controversial CIA director Gina Haspel strode across Capitol Hill today to brief members of Congress on the Iran issues.

There is some difference of perspective on how effective the briefing was.

Rep Mark Meadows says the briefing for lawmakers was “compelling and decisive” and left “little doubt” that the president made the right call in killing Qasem Soleimani and there was “clear and present danger.”

Meadows says Director Haspel was very “clear and articulate” that there was an “imminent threat” from Qasem Soleimani. “This general’s absence will not be easily replaced,” he adds and says it will take months if not years to fill the gap Qasem Soleimani leaves.

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel said the theme of the Iran briefing "was the administration saying trust us."

"I’m not sure who I trust or what I trust. We’ve been told so many different things that really just bother me."

GOP KY Sen Paul: I think sanctions have actually pushed Iran away from the negotiating table and made it less likely to have a diplomatic solution..I did just speak to the President moments ago, I do believe that the President honestly does not want another war in the Middle East

British prime minister Boris Johnson and his Canadian counterpart, Justin Trudeau, had a telephone call with each other earlier in which they discussed the need for urgent de-escalation on all sides in the US-Iran crisis following Iranian missile attacks on military bases housing US troops in Iraq overnight, a spokesperson for Johnson said.

The leaders also discussed working together, and with international partners, to ensure Iran is prevented from acquiring a nuclear weapon.

Continue reading...

Why is Pelosi waiting to send Trump articles of impeachment to the Senate?

Speculation and political parlor-gaming about Nancy Pelosi’s strategy have filled the informational vacuum

What is Nancy Pelosi thinking?

Related: Trump ex-adviser Michael Flynn should face up to six months in prison, say prosecutors – live

Continue reading...

Pelosi delays sending articles of impeachment against Trump – live

House to convene for the first time of the new year and a first true signal of when speaker might advance impeachment issue

  • Help us cover the critical issues of 2020. Consider making a contribution

Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell reportedly plans to advance a set of rules for the looming impeachment trial without Democratic support.

Politico reports:

McConnell is on the verge of having sufficient backing in his 53-member caucus to pass a blueprint for the trial that leaves the question of seeking witnesses and documents until after opening arguments are made, according to multiple senators. That framework would mirror the contours of President Bill Clinton’s trial and ignore Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s demands for witnesses and new evidence.

No final decision has been made, but in a brief interview, McConnell said he would address the possibility of spurning Democrats on Tuesday afternoon.

Appearing at the US Capitol for the first time in 2020, House speaker Nancy Pelosi deflected reporters’ repeated questions about when she might transmit the articles of impeachment to the Senate.

Entering the Capitol for the first time in 2020, ⁦@SpeakerPelosi⁩ is still mum on when she’ll send articles of impeachment to the Senate —> pic.twitter.com/8WlaSiCwvg

Continue reading...

Confusion over letter from US military signaling withdrawal of troops from Iraq – as it happened

Mark Esper says memo on US troops’ ‘onward movement’ from Iraq is not accurate and ‘there’s been no decision’

  • Help us cover the critical issues of 2020. Consider making a contribution

Kari Paul here, logging off for the night. Here are today’s top events to make note of:

Pete Buttigieg is heading back to Iowa on Jan. 12 to do more campaigning ahead of the upcoming caucus there, his team announced on Monday.

According to the announcement, Buttigieg has now visited Iowa 21 times, with visits to 49 counties to hold 100 events across the state.

Continue reading...

Impeachment: Warren accuses Trump of ‘wag the dog’ strike on Suleimani

Elizabeth Warren has suggested Donald Trump ordered the drone assassination of Iranian general Qassem Suleimani to distract the American public from his own impeachment, taking the country “to the edge of war” for his own political purposes.

Related: Making of a martyr: how Qassem Suleimani was hunted down

Continue reading...

Trump condemned for tweets pointing to name of Ukraine whistleblower

President posted link to article that identifies official – then sent a further tweet containing the name

Donald Trump has retweeted material that publicly names the purported whistleblower whose complaint about the US president’s dealings with Ukraine led to his impeachment.

The president on Friday night sent a retweet from one of his supporters containing the alleged name of the individual. Trump drew the attention of his 68 million Twitter followers to the post which, along with publicising the name, inaccurately claimed that the whistleblower “committed perjury by making false statements” and is being protected by Adam Schiff, chairman of the House intelligence committee. There is no evidence to support these assertions.

Earlier, on Thursday, Trump had also retweeted a post by his re-election campaign’s “war room” that linked to an article by the conservative Washington Examiner news website. The article, published on 3 December, has the name of the alleged whistleblower in its headline.

Continue reading...

Trump impeachment: Lisa Murkowski ‘disturbed’ by Mitch McConnell’s stance

Republican senator unhappy with Senate leader saying he was working in ‘total coordination’ with White House

Republican US Senator Lisa Murkowski has said she was “disturbed” by the Senate leader’s approach to working with White House counsel on the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, saying there should be distance between the two.

The comments by the Alaska lawmaker come after Mitch McConnell, majority leader of the Republican-led Senate, said during a Fox News interview earlier this month that he was working in “total coordination” with the White House on the upcoming trial.

Continue reading...

Donald Trump spends Christmas Eve railing against impeachment

  • President claims Democrats ‘in real doubt’ about evidence
  • Trump tells troops he has yet to buy a present for Melania

Donald Trump has launched fresh attacks on the congressional architects of his impeachment, even as the standoff intensified between Democrats in the US House and Republicans in the Senate over the president’s impending trial, and appeared set to last well into the new year.

And on a less grave note, Trump revealed in a video conference with US troops to deliver Christmas greetings that, despite it being the morning of 24 December, he had not yet bought his wife her Christmas present.

Continue reading...

Ukraine aid blocked soon after Trump’s phone call with Zelenskiy, emails show

Trump acted about 90 minutes after the ‘do us a favor’ phone call behind the scenes to freeze aid from the Pentagon

As Republicans and Democrats continue to squabble on the terms of Trump’s impeachment trial in the Senate, newly-released government emails show that it took only about 90 minutes after Donald Trump’s infamous July telephone call to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy for White House officials to order the Pentagon to freeze military funding for Ukraine.

Related: Republican rush to defend Trump reveals a party in thrall to its leader

Continue reading...