Donald Trump is set to face impeachment in the House of Representatives, becoming the fourth president in US history to face removal from office on charges of misconduct after the House Judiciary Committee'prepares to send articles of impeachment to the full Congress.
The full House is expected to vote on impeachment next week.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she doesn't plan to whip votes to support impeachment, saying that House leadership won't pressure Democrats in vulnerable districts or moderate Democrats fearing political fallout from supporting efforts to remove the president from office.
She said: "We are not whipping this legislation, nor do we ever whip something like this. People have to come to their own conclusions. They've seen the facts as presented ... They'll make their own decision. I don't say anything to them."
Meanwhile, the president had an explosive day on Twitter, including an attack on teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg after she was named TIME magazine’s Person of the Year ahead of him as the committee prepared to resume its debate over articles of impeachment threatening to end his presidency.
“So ridiculous. Greta must work on her Anger Management problem, then go to a good old fashioned movie with a friend! Chill Greta, Chill!” the president wrote on Twitter.
The president's campaign also shared a photo of the TIME cover with Mr Trump's face superimposed over the teenage climate activist.
Mr Trump also faced criticism for hosting notoriously antisemitic Texan pastor Robert Jeffress at his White House Hanukkah party, a man who once claimed Jews would go to hell and that Mr Trump’s impeachment would cause a “Civil War-like fracture” in American society.
Follow along developments as they happened.
Congressman David Cicilline of Rhode Island asked Republicans standing by Trump to "wake up" and honour their oath of office. Republican Mike Johnson of Louisiana responded with his own request to "put your country over party."
One Democrat, Val Demings of Florida, told the panel that, as a descendant of slaves and now a member of Congress, she has faith in America because it is "government of the people" and in this country "nobody is above the law." Freshman Democratic Lucy McBath of Georgia emotionally talked about losing her son to gun violence and said that while impeachment was not why she came to Washington, she wants to "fight for an America that my son Jordan would be proud of."
Republican Jim Jordan of Ohio said Democrats are impeaching because "they don't like us," and read out a long list of Trump's accomplishments. "It's not just because they don't like the president, they don't like us," Jordan added. "They don't like the 63 million people who voted for this president, all of us in flyover country, all of us common folk in Ohio, Wisconsin, Tennessee and Texas."
The committee is considering two articles of impeachment introduced by Democrats. They charge Trump with abuse of power for asking Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden while withholding aid as leverage, and obstruction of Congress for stonewalling the House's investigation.
On Thursday, the committee will likely vote to send the articles to the full House, which is expected to vote next week. That could come after hours of debate over Republican amendments, though the articles aren't likely to be changed. Democrats are unlikely to accept any amendments proposed by Republicans unified against Trump's impeachment.
Democrats are also unified. They have agreed to the language, which spans only nine pages and says that Trump acted "corruptly" and "betrayed the nation" when he asked Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden and the 2016 presidential election. Hamstrung in the minority, Republicans wouldn't have the votes to make changes without support from at least some Democrats.
The Wednesday evening session of the 41-member panel lasted more than three hours, with opening statements from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.
House Judiciary Committee chairman Jerrold Nadler opened the hearing by making a final argument for impeachment and urging his Republican colleagues to reconsider. He said the committee should consider whether the evidence shows that Trump committed these acts, if they rise to the level of impeachable high crimes and misdemeanors and what the consequences are if they fail to act. "When his time has passed, when his grip on our politics is gone, when our country returns, as surely it will, to calmer times and stronger leadership, history will look back on our actions here today," Nadler said. "How would you be remembered?"
Republicans are also messaging to the American people - and to Trump himself - as they argue that the articles show Democrats are out to get the president. Most Republicans contend, as Trump does, that he has done nothing wrong, and all of them are expected to vote against the articles.
The top Republican on the panel, Georgia's Doug Collins, argued that Democrats are impeaching the president because they think they can't beat him in the 2020 election. Democrats think the only thing they need is a "32-second commercial saying we impeached him," Collins said. "That's the wrong reason to impeach somebody, and the American people are seeing through this," he continued. "But at the end of the day, my heart breaks for a committee that has trashed this institution."
Republicans are expected to offer an array of amendments and make procedural motions on Thursday, even if they know none of them will pass. The Judiciary panel is made up of some of the most partisan members on both sides and Republicans will launch animated arguments in Trump's defence.
Earlier on Wednesday, Collins said the GOP would offer amendments but said they'd mainly be about allowing more time to debate. "Remember, you can't fix bad," Collins said. "These are bad, you're not going to fix it."
In the formal articles announced on Tuesday, the Democrats said Trump enlisted a foreign power in "corrupting" the US election process and endangered national security by asking Ukraine to investigate his political rivals, including Biden, while withholding $391m (£302m) in congressionally-approved American military aid as leverage. That benefited Russia over the US as America's ally fought Kremlin-backed aggression, the Democrats said.
Trump then obstructed Congress by ordering current and former officials to defy House subpoenas for testimony and by blocking access to documents, the charges say. Trump tweeted that to impeach a president "who has done NOTHING wrong, is sheer Political Madness."
Alex Woodward has this report.
Horowitz testified to the panel about the findings outlined in his 467-page report looking into the origins of the FBI investigation into Russian influence in the president’s campaign in 2016, which concluded there was no "documentary or testimonial evidence that political bias or improper motivation influenced the FBI’s decision to conduct these operations".
"There is no mistake that President Trump made clear in the meeting that he had with Foreign Minister Lavrov and the rest of the Russian team that was there that President Trump personally, and America, finds their meddling in our elections unacceptable in the very same way that I had said it earlier to Foreign Minister Lavrov," he continued.
Parnas, an American citizen who was born in Ukraine, was released on bail after his arrest in October and has been living under house arrest in Florida. Joseph Bondy, his attorney, said he would respond to the prosecutors in a court filing.
Parnas was charged alongside another Florida businessman, Belarus-born Igor Fruman, with illegally funneling money to a pro-Trump election committee and other politicians. Both men have pleaded not guilty.
Prosecutors accused Parnas and Fruman of using a shell company to donate $325,000 (£247,000) to a pro-Trump election committee and of raising money for former congressman Pete Sessions of Texas as part of an effort that was ultimately successful to have the president remove Marie Yovanovitch as ambassador to Ukraine.

Prosecutors said in their filing on Wednesday that Parnas had concealed significant financial information while negotiating his bail package, including income from a law firm and a $1m (£760,000) payment he had received from an account in Russia in September. They said Parnas has "considerable ties abroad and access to seemingly limitless sources of foreign funding," having raised $1.5m (£1.1m) from "Ukrainian and Russian sources" in the last three years.
Parnas' connections include an unnamed Ukrainian "oligarch" living in Vienna and fighting extradition to the United States, according to prosecutors. That description matches Dmytro Firtash. Prosecutors also said that Parnas falsely told an officer supervising his bail in Florida that a judge had effectively ruled he should be allowed to leave his house. They said that Parnas' incentive to flee had become stronger since his arrest because he remains under investigation and is likely to be charged with additional crimes.
Prosecutors are also investigating payments made to Giuliani, who has not been charged with a crime and has denied any wrongdoing.

"As you well know, a witness answered your direct question that the vice president never raised those investigations," the letter continues. "As such, the request to declassify and release another world leader transcript serves no purpose."
"The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence has already voted out its partisan report and transmitted it to the House Judiciary Committee," it continues. "Your request, coming after the completion of your report, serves no legitimate legislative or impeachment inquiry purpose."
Donald Trump‘s team have edited his face on to the body of teenage climate change activist Greta Thunberg after she was named Time‘s Person of the Year.
The official Trump War Room account on Twitter posted the altered front cover of the magazine on Wednesday, the same day the 16-year-old won the accolade for “turning vague anxieties about the planet into a worldwide movement calling for global change”.
Mr Trump’s team said: “When it comes to keeping his promises, there’s only one Person Of The Year.”
Listing the reasons why they believe he deserved the award, they added: “Booming Economy, Record Job Creation, Historic Tax Cuts, #AmericaFirst Trade Deals, Isis Destroyed, Building the Wall.”









