Donald Trump has been accused of endangering America’s Kurdish allies in Syria by his own former envoy, an ex-ambassador and a key DC attack dog after announcing a plan to withdraw US troops from the country’s northern border, therein abandoning the Syrian Democratic Forces to an onslaught from the Turkish military.
The president has meanwhile been ordered to turn over eight years of tax returns to New York prosecutors after a US district judge ruled his financial affairs are not immune from investigation in spite of his high office.
As the Ukraine scandal rumbles on, Mr Trump has conceded impeachment is a “bad thing to have on your resume” during a phone call with House Republicans, a rare confession that he fears for his legacy as a second whistleblower emerges to support the first’s account of the damning 25 July call with Volodymyr Zelensky during which the president appeared to push for the Eastern European leader to investigate allegations against his 2020 rival Joe Biden.
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According to two sources who spoke to Axios, the president then aadded: "But it's going to make Kevin speaker".
The official is said to have already been interviewed by Michael Atkinson, the inspector general of the US Intelligence Community.
"Secretary Perry absolutely supported and encouraged the president to speak to the new president of Ukraine to discuss matters related to their energy security and economic development," Perry's Energy Department spokeswoman, Shaylyn Hynes, said in an email.
Trump has said during his aforementioned call with House Republicans on Friday that it was Perry who had teed up the July call with Ukraine without suggestioning Perry had anything to do with the pressure on Ukraine to investigate the Bidens or the US hold-up in military aid to the country.
Perry, the former governor of Texas and up to now a lower-profile but active member of Trump's Cabinet, has made repeated trips to Ukraine and met often with Ukranian officials, including Zelenskiy. Perry and his agency say his involvement with Ukraine was part of US policy, predating the Trump administration, to increase US natural gas, coal and other supplies to Eastern Europe to lessen Russia's control of the region's energy market.
"He continues to believe that there is significant need for improved regional energy security," Hynes said. Perry was heading to Lithuania again on Sunday night and would meet with nearly two dozen European energy officials, including those from Ukraine, she said.
Hynes did not immediately answer questions on Sunday about whether Perry had discussed the Trump administration's push for help investigating Trump's Democratic rivals in his meetings with Ukraine.
But Perry told an evangelical Christian news outlet, CBN News, in an interview aired on Friday that he had never heard anyone in the administration bring up Biden or Biden's son, who served on a board of a Ukraine natural gas business, in dealings with Ukrainian officials.
"Not once, as God as my witness, not once was a Biden name - not the former vice president, not his son - ever mentioned," Perry told the outlet. "Corruption was talked about in the country but it was always a relatively vague term of, you know, the oligarchs and this and that and what have you."
House lawmakers in the impeachment probe are presently seeking information from vice president Mike Pence and secretary of state Mike Pompeo on the administration's approach to Ukraine.
Sargeant, his wife and corporate entities tied to the family have donated at least $1.2m (£975,225) to Republican campaigns and PACs over the last 20 years, including $100,000 (£81,274) in June to the Trump Victory Fund, according to federal and state campaign finance records. He has also served as finance chair of the Florida state GOP and gave nearly $14,000 (£11,378) to Giuliani's failed 2008 presidential campaign.
Among those due to testify: Gordon Sondland, the US ambassador to the European Union who was involved in efforts to get Ukraine to open the investigations, and Marie Yovanovitch, who - as previously discussed - was abruptly recalled from her post as ambassador to Ukraine in May after Trump supporters questioned her loyalty.
Deputy secretary of state George Kent is scheduled to testify on Monday. Yovanovitch is due to appear on Friday.
Trump's White House could also formally tell Speaker Pelosi as early as Monday that it will ignore lawmakers' demands for documents until the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives holds a vote to formally approve the impeachment inquiry.
Pelosi says a vote is not needed, but Democrats say she would prevail if one were held, although very few Republicans would be expected to side with the Democratic majority. Congress returns to Washington on 15 October after a two-week recess.
"There's no question in my mind that she would have the votes," Democratic representative Jim Himes said on CBS' Face the Nation on Sunday.
David Wasserman, who works for the nonpartisan Cook Political Report, said he has had private conversations with Republican congressmen who believe Trump is “wildly unfit to be president”.
“They can’t say that in public, or else their political careers would be torpedoed by one tweet from the Oval Office,” he told The New York Times.
Trump retweeted Graham's support four times this weekend alone:










