<a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/29/us/politics/trump-impeachment.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">The Latest on the Trump Impeachment Inquiry: White House Official Testifies</a>  <font color="#6f6f6f">The New York Times</font>

Politics|The Latest on the Trump Impeachment Inquiry: White House Official Testifies

The first current White House official appeared on Capitol Hill to testify to lawmakers.

Right Now

House Democrats unveiled rules for the impeachment inquiry, proposing how they’d take public what has been a confidential fact-finding process.

Image
Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman, the top Ukraine expert on the National Security Council, arriving Tuesday on Capitol Hill.Credit…Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman, the top Ukraine expert on the National Security Council, arrived Tuesday morning at the Capitol to testify to impeachment investigators about how he twice reported his concerns to a White House lawyer about how President Trump and his inner circle treated Ukraine.

He appeared in his midnight blue dress uniform, a bevy of medals pinned to his chest, for the closed-door session, where the colonel planned to deliver the latest in a series of damning accounts about the president’s dealings with Ukraine. His opening statement details his concerns about Mr. Trump’s request, during a July 25 telephone call, that Ukraine’s president launch investigations into former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and his family.

Even as Colonel Vindman arrived, Mr. Trump lashed out at the decorated Army combat veteran without naming him, accusing him on Twitter of being a longtime political opponent.

Mr. Trump has sought to undermine the credibility of impeachment witnesses by suggesting they are part of a deep state political conspiracy staging a coup, or have a political agenda against him. In his opening statement, Colonel Vindman described himself as just the opposite, saying he was a “patriot” who is determined to “advance and defend our country irrespective of party or politics.”

Colonel Vindman is a Ukrainian-American immigrant who received a Purple Heart after being wounded in Iraq by a roadside bomb. He is the first White House official, and the only witness so far who listened in on the July call to testify in the impeachment inquiry.

The colonel was subpoenaed on Tuesday morning, as expected, after the White House directed him not to appear and sought to limit the scope of his testimony, according to an official involved in the inquiry who spoke on condition of anonymity without authorization to discuss it.

He twice reported concerns about President Trump’s dealings with Ukraine, according to a draft statement.

A leading House Republican drew the line on Tuesday at personal attacks on Colonel Vindman, sharply distancing herself from a flood of criticism of the decorated Army officer from conservative commentators who have publicly questioned his patriotism.

“We’re talking about decorated veterans who’ve served this nation, who’ve put their lives on the line, and it’s shameful to question their patriotism, their love of this nation, and we shouldn’t be involved in that process,” Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the third-ranking Republican, told reporters, unprompted at a morning news conference.

Within hours after Colonel Vindman’s damaging account of Mr. Trump’s dealings with Ukraine became public on Tuesday night, the president’s allies in the conservative news media began disparaging him, with some suggesting that he was a spy loyal to his native Ukraine, not the United States.

The Fox News anchor Laura Ingraham said during her broadcast on Monday night that Colonel Vindman was working inside the White House, “apparently against the president’s interest,” noting that he spoke Ukrainian. John Yoo, who worked in the White House Counsel’s Office under George W. Bush, agreed with Ms. Ingraham that the situation was “astounding,” adding, “some people might call that espionage.”

Brian Kilmeade, who hosts Fox & Friends, one of Mr. Trump’s favorite shows, said Tuesday morning of Colonel Vindman: “We also know he was born in the Soviet Union, emigrated with his family. Young. He tends to feel simpatico with the Ukraine.”

Sean P. Duffy, a former Republican representative from Wisconsin and pro-Trump commentator, also questioned Colonel Vindman’s loyalties, saying Tuesday during an appearance on CNN: “It seems very clear that he is incredibly concerned about Ukrainian defense — I don’t know that he’s concerned about American policy.”

“We all have an affinity to our homeland where we came from,” Mr. Duffy added.

Later on Twitter, Mr. Duffy appeared to walk back his remarks, praising Colonel Vindman’s service.

“Lt. Col. Vindman is an American war hero,” he wrote, adding, “My point is that Mr. Vindman is an unelected advisor, he gives ADVICE. President Trump sets the policy.”

While Ms. Cheney rejected those suggestions, she continued to rail against the impeachment inquiry that has called Colonel Vindman to testify, saying it was illegitimate and unfair.

“The process is broken,” she said on Tuesday. “It’s tainted.”

House Democrats on Tuesday unveiled new rules for going public with their impeachment inquiry, directing the Intelligence Committee to convene open hearings and produce a written report to share the findings of its investigation into President Trump’s pressure campaign on Ukraine.

Under the proposed rules, which the House plans to bring up for a vote on Thursday, the report, along with transcripts of witness interviews being conducted behind closed doors and additional evidence collected by the Intelligence Committee, would promptly be shared with the Judiciary Committee, which would weigh the evidence and produce articles of impeachment to send to the full House.

The draft resolution allows for new due process rights for President Trump and maps out exactly how Democrats plan to take public the confidential fact-finding process they launched late last month.

“The evidence we have already collected paints the picture of a president who abused his power by using multiple levers of government to press a foreign country to interfere in the 2020 election,” four House committee leaders involved in the inquiry wrote in a statement. “Following in the footsteps of previous impeachment inquiries, the next phase will move from closed depositions to open hearings where the American people will learn firsthand about the president’s misconduct.”
— Nicholas Fandos

Even as they prepare to move their case into public view, Democrats at the helm of the impeachment inquiry continued on Tuesday to add names to the queue of administration officials they are calling for private depositions.

The most high-profile among them was Robert Blair, a top national security adviser to Mick Mulvaney, the acting White House chief of staff. The Wall Street Journal has reported that Mr. Blair listened in on the July phone call between Mr. Trump and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine on Mr. Mulvaney’s behalf, but did not raise concerns about what he heard at the time. Mr. Blair is also likely to have information about deliberations within the White House over the decision to suspend $391 million in security aid allocated for Ukraine.

Democrats have also requested testimony from Brian McCormack, the chief of staff to Energy Secretary Rick Perry, and Wells Griffith, an energy adviser at the White House, according to an official familiar with the matter. Mr. Perry played a significant role in the administration’s outreach to Ukraine. At least one impeachment witnesses has identified Mr. McCormack as having been intimately involved in many of the events under scrutiny.

It is not yet clear if any of the officials plan to comply with the requests, which were first reported by The Washington Post.
Nicholas Fandos

At their weekly caucus meeting on Tuesday, House Democrats heard a largely upbeat message regarding the shifting political field in the wake of the impeachment inquiry, along with a warning that voters will be watching to see that the inquiry is handled fairly.

Citing three different pollsters, officials with House Democrats’ campaign arm reported that recent polling shows a steady generic ballot for Democrats, with the party holding a 3-point lead in the most competitive House districts and an 8-point lead across all districts, according to a Democratic aide familiar with the discussion.

Democratic campaign officials also cited new focus-group research that showed that voters want to see the impeachment inquiry conducted as a fact-finding investigation — not a process designed to arrive at a foregone conclusion. 

But the pollsters stressed that health care, the kitchen-table issue that catapulted many of the current Democratic freshmen to victory in 2018, remains voters’ top priority, and encouraged lawmakers to capitalize on that through a proposed bill to lower the cost of prescription drugs. That bill has been largely sidelined since the inquiry began.
Catie Edmondson

  • President Trump repeatedly pressured President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine to investigate people and issues of political concern to Mr. Trump, including former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. Here’s a timeline of events since January.

  • A C.I.A. officer who was once detailed to the White House filed a whistle-blower complaint on Mr. Trump’s interactions with Mr. Zelensky. Read the complaint.

Video

Video player loading
President Trump’s personal lawyer. The prosecutor general of Ukraine. Joe Biden’s son. These are just some of the names mentioned in the whistle-blower’s complaint. What were their roles? We break it down.CreditCredit…Illustration by The New York Times