Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Politics
Andy Gregory

Trump news – live: President lashes out amid impeachment report 'bribery' claims as poll finds half of Americans support his removal

Donald Trump unleashed a furious tirade against his opponents and ranted about his personal ratings as a Fox News poll suggested half of Americans want him removed from the White House ahead of a looming vote on his impeachment.

The president launched personal attacks on Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff as the House Judiciary Committee published its full 658-page report into the Ukraine scandal, accusing him of bribery and concluding he had “abused his power in soliciting and pressuring a vulnerable foreign nation to corrupt” the 2020 election.

The outbursts came after an adviser tasked with defending Mr Trump in the upcoming inquiry suggested the pressure of the looming charges was beginning to weigh heavily on him, with the House expected to vote for his impeachment this week.

Trump congratulates British PM in first call since election and discusses 'ambitious free trade agreement'
 
Boris Johnson and Mr Trump said they looked forward to continued close cooperation and the negotiation of an "ambitious free trade agreement" during a phone call on Monday, Reuters reports Downing Street officials as saying.

"The prime minister spoke with President Trump, who congratulated him on the result of the general election," a Downing Street spokesman said.

"They discussed the huge importance of the relationship between the UK and US, and looked forward to continued close cooperation on issues such as security and trade, including the negotiation of an ambitious free trade agreement."
'What is Trump hiding?' advert unveiled in Times Square
 
It appears the marchers on Tuesday might have something sympathetic to their cause to look at as they gather in Times Square.
 
A group of anti-Trump Republicans have been putting these adverts up in a number of states, with their Times Square advert going up today.
 
Hundreds of anti-Trump marches reportedly planned ahead of impeachment vote
 
According to a pro-impeachment protest site, there are more than 550 "Nobody is Above the Law" demonstrations planned this week in preparation for the House vote on two articles of impeachment.
 
LA Kauffman, a grassroots activist and author of Direct Action: Protest, shared information of the events calling for the "impeachment, conviction, and removal of Donald Trump".
 
More on the five aides that resigned after Jeff Van Drew defected to the GOP over Trump's impeachment
 
Cheri Bustos, chair of the Democrat's campaigning committee, has offered jobs to the five staff members left cold by the New Jersey senator's decision to jump party.
 

Donald Trump Jr and other Republicans have praised Mr Van Drew's decision amid efforts to paint the impeachment proceedings as an unjust "hoax".
Senate minority leader explains his call for at least four witnesses during Congress trial
 
Chuck Schumer has appeared on CNN explaining why he has asked for at least four witnesses during a likely hearing to remove Donald Trump in the senate. The witnesses are: acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and his senior adviser Robert Blair, Mr Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton, and Michael Duffey from the Office of Management and Budget.
 
Mr Schumer asserted there will be “no fishing expeditions”, just “the kind of justice America is known for, which is swift but fair”.

“Look, this is so serious,” he told CNN. “When you have the evidence the House has, which is very severe, all the facts should come out. These four witnesses have direct knowledge of the facts, particularly with regard to the aid to Ukraine. I don’t know what they’ll say.”
 
 
Meanwhile, calls for the House to withhold impeachment articles from the Senate until Republicans guarantee a "fair trial" are gathering steam.
 
Donald Trump and Jr seize Democrat's party switch as evidence of unjust impeachment
 
 
The president has endorsed his son of the same name's praise for Jeff Van Drew, who recently announced his defection to the GOP over impeachment, causing five of his aides to resign.
 
Mr Trump Jr said: "So great to see someone willing to put party politics aside and call balls and strikes when they see them." 
 
 
 
 
Meanwhile, the president is looking ahead to 2020.
 
Here's a little more detail on the recently published report.
 
In a 169-page document that will accompany the two articles of impeachment (abuse of power and obstruction of Congress) expected to be put to the House this week, the House Judiciary Committee has claimed Donald Trump "committed multiple federal crimes", including bribery, and that the president "betrayed the nation".
 
Describing Mr Trump's alleged abuse of power, the report states: "President Trump abused the powers of the Presidency by ignoring and injuring national security and other vital national interests to obtain an improper personal political benefit.
 
"He has also betrayed the nation by abusing his high office to enlist a foreign power in corrupting democratic elections… President Trump, by such conduct, has demonstrated that he will remain a threat to national security and the Constitution if allowed to remain in office, and has acted in a manner grossly incompatible with self-governance and the rule of law.”
 
 
Divided into four parts, the full 658-page document respectively logs the processes of the investigation, sets out the Constitution's standards for impeachment, details the case against Mr Trump's dealings in Ukraine, and alleges that the White House worked to obstruct the investigation by refusing the House's requests for evidence and testimonies.
Donald Trump is awake and on a retweeting spree
 
The US president has shared several clips and statements backing his assertion that the impeachment efforts are unwarranted and playing badly with the public, despite a poll from Fox News suggesting a majority of Americans support his impeachment.
 
His aide and White House social media director Dan Scavino has shared a video which appears to show he or an associate hounding Judiciary Committee chairman Jerry Nadler over his efforts to impeach the president, with one person heard saying: "You will be exposed for your treason."
 
 
Mr Trump also appeared to back Dan Scavino's calls for former White House press director Sarah Huckabee-Sanders to run for governor of Arkansas, and branded the impeachment efforts "the greatest con-job in the history of American politics".
 
Five aides resign as Democrat switches party to vote against impeachment

The five have written a letter saying they are "deeply saddened" and can no longer work in good conscience for congressman Jeff Van Drew because his party switch "doesn't align with the values we brought to this job".
 
 
Mr Van Drew has said he plans to vote this week against impeaching Donald Trump, putting him at odds with nearly every other House Democrat.

Mr Van Drew, who is in his first term, represents a southern New Jersey district that Mr Trump carried in 2016 and was expected to face a difficult re-election next year.
Joe Biden receives 2020 endorsement in Alabama
 
The mayor of Alabama's largest city is endorsing Joe Biden for the 2020 Democratic Party presidential nomination just weeks after the vice president met with a group of Southern black mayors representing millions of voters in key early primary states, The Associated Press reports.
 
In an exclusive interview with AP on Sunday, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin said he left that Atlanta meeting in November convinced that Mr Biden is the best choice to defeat Donald Trump.
 
"I think he would view mayors as his partners in the campaign and he would view us as partners in the White House," Mr Woodfin said. "That's important to me."
 
Mr Woodfin's endorsement, which he is expected to announce later today, is the latest amid a scramble among the 2020 candidates to shore up support with mayors.
   center no-repeat #999999;cursor:pointer;top:-8px; border-radius: 2px;">↵
Fox News host 'stunned' by poll suggesting half of Americans support Trump's removal
 
Brian Kilmeade has said he is "stunned" by a Fox News poll suggesting 50 per cent of Americans support Trump's removal from office. Here's his reaction on Monday morning:
 
 
Here's more detail on the polls:
 
Hold articles of impeachment 'like Sword of Damocles' over Trump and McConnell, says Harvard constitutional law professor
 
Here's one possible route being floated in response to Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell's insistence that Republicans will work "hand in hand" with the White House to ensure the impeachment trial's narrative is to Mr Trump's liking.
 
Dangle impeachment over their heads "like a sword of Damocles" until they agree to hold "a fair trial in the Senate, not a Trumpian whitewash", says professor of Constitutional law at Harvard, Laurence Tribe.
 
Trump ally Lindsey Graham says he is 'not a fair juror' and will vote against impeachment
 
Republican senator Lindsey Graham has said he has made up his mind on impeachment and does not plan on being a “fair juror” in a Senate trial of Donald Trump, Conrad Duncan reports.

Senators will be called upon to determine whether the president should be removed from office if the House of Representatives votes to pass articles of impeachment against Mr Trump this week.

However, Mr Graham, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has said he plans to shut down an impeachment trial as quickly as possible and does not want to hear from any more witnesses on the president’s alleged misconduct with Ukraine.
 
“I have clearly made up my mind. I'm not trying to hide the fact that I have disdain for the accusations and the process,” Mr Graham told CNN on Sunday. “I am ready to vote on the underlying articles. I don't really need to hear a lot of witnesses.”
 
Read more here: 
 
Trump and Johnson to speak in due course, Number 10 says
 
According to Reuters, a spokesperson for Boris Johnson has said he is sure the PM will speak to Donald Trump in due course.
 
On Friday, the US president hailed the PM's victory as "tremendous" for America, saying: "It means a lot of trade, a tremendous amount of trade. They want to do business with us so badly."
 
Trump impeachment ‘closest to what founders actually feared’, says historian
 
Historian Jeffrey A Engel, co-author of Impeachment: An American History, has helped to put the upcoming House vote in context, by pointing out that this is the first time a president will be tried over an issue relating to foreign interference – and as such “is the only one that actually deals with the kind of issues that the founders explicitly discussed at the Constitutional convention. 


Mr Engel told Sky News: “Their primary examples of when a president would need to be removed from office all involved a president who worked with foreign powers, who came under the influence of foreign powers, and in particular … who in some way lied or disseminated in order to achieve office, and then achieve office again, to keep their first commission of crimes from being found out.
 
"So I think this is the one that is the closest to what the founders actually feared.”
Trump's expected impeachment re-election boost may not be going to plan, polling suggests
 
Donald Trump has embraced Democratic-led efforts to impeach him as a major asset to his 2020 re-election campaign, betting that Republicans and disaffected political independents will be motivated to vote for him next November.

But if the Republican president is hoping for a public backlash like the one against the 1998 impeachment of Bill Clinton, it has so far not worked out that way.
 
Reuters/Ipsos polling data over the past few months shows that while Mr Trump is not enjoying anything close to the kind of bipartisan rise in support experienced by Mr Clinton. If anything, the demand among Democrats to hold the president to account has become more fervent, while his approval ratings among Republicans stay relatively flat.
 
Here is another notable comparison of the two presidents as they faced looming impeachment:
 
 
Mr Trump has long asserted that the "Do Nothing Democrats" are fixated only on his impeachment, and Nancy Pelosi's backing of his new NAFTA trade deal replacement is likely cognizant of this.
Here's a bit more detail on that Fox News polling that prompted the US president to advise the broadcaster hired new pollsters.
 
53 per cent of Americans believe Mr Trump abused his power, in contrast to 38 per cent who don't think he did.
 
45 per cent believe he committed bribery, compared to 37 per cent who don't think he did.
 
Democratic senate leader calls for at least four witnesses during Senate trial as Republicans indicate they will 'take cues' from Trump
 
Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer has written to majority leader Mitch McConnell, calling for the eventual trial in the Senate to include witnesses and fresh documents.
 
Mr Schumer requested that key officials in the Trump administration testify, including acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and his senior adviser Robert Blair, Mr Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton, and Michael Duffey from the Office of Management and Budget.
 
The Washington Post's Seung Min Kim published a copy of Mr Schumer's demands: 
 
 
But Mr McConnell and the White House have indicated Republican leaders will work "hand in hand" with Mr Trump to ensure the narrative of Senate hearings are to his liking.
 
Last week, Mr McConnell angered Democrats when he told Fox News: "Everything I do during this, I am coordinating with White House counsel."
 
Republicans have defended this as a move to ensure Mr Trump receives "a fair trial".
 
 
Mr Schumer and Mr McConnell are expected to meet this week to discuss the format of the likely Senate hearing.
What's next in the impeachment proceedings?
 
The Associated Press has compiled a guide of what's expected in the impeachment votes. Here it is:
 
The House Vote
House leaders are preparing for the final impeachment vote just as lawmakers are about to leave for the holiday break. Approval would set up a 2020 trial in the Senate.
Votes on the two articles could come as soon as Wednesday, with a meeting to set debate rules already scheduled for Tuesday. Floor consideration is expected to be much like that of a regular bill.
The House Judiciary Committee vote was strictly along party lines, and the floor vote is expected to be similar, with a few exceptions. No Republicans have so far signalled that they will support the articles of impeachment, but a small handful of Democrats who represent GOP-leaning districts have said they may join Republicans in voting against them.
 
Impeachment Managers
Nancy Pelosi is expected to name, as soon as this week, a handful of members to argue the Democrats' case in the Senate trial. It's still unclear who these impeachment managers will be, but they are likely to be members of the Judiciary and intelligence committees that took the lead on the case.
Ms Pelosi has kept quiet on potential names. But the managers are expected to be from safe Democratic districts, diverse in race and gender and from all parts of the country. It is also likely that the number of impeachment managers will be fewer than 13, the number of GOP managers in Bill Clinton's 1998 trial.
Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff and Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler are expected to assume two of the positions.
 
The Senate Trial
If the House approves the charges, as expected, impeachment would then move to a weeks-long Senate trial, where senators are jurors and the impeachment managers act as prosecutors. The chief justice of the United States presides over the trial.
If the Senate approves an article of impeachment with a two-thirds vote of "guilty," the president is convicted and removed from office. If all the articles are rejected - as expected - the president is acquitted.
It is unclear how long the trial will last or exactly how it will be structured.
 
This is the fourth time in history Congress has moved to impeach a president. If he were convicted by the Senate, Mr Trump would be the first to be removed.
Trump quotes former David Cameron aide likening impeachment impact to UK general election result
 
As he lashed out at top Democrats, the president loosely quoted Fox News’ Steve Hilton who yesterday likened the impeachment inquiry’s impact on the 2020 election to Brexit and the UK’s general election.

“For the last three years in England, the establishment tried to overturn the 2016 Brexit vote and the people told them to get lost. They meant it the first time and they voted for it a second time,” said the presenter, who also indulged in the Ukraine-Biden conspiracy during his defence of the president – a theory which US intelligence officials have warned serves Russian interests. 

Mr Hilton, a former director of strategy for David Cameron, added: “They meant it the first time and they voted for it a second time. Here in America it will be the same but even more so, because while in England nothing got done during the establishment’s attempted counter-revolution, in this country, while all this has been going on – the obstruction, the impeachment, Russia, Ukraine, whatever, president Trump has managed to deliver not just his promises, but a record … which surely adds up to one of the most successful presidencies in history.”
 
Mr Trump posted an interpretation to his followers:
 
 
Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.