Trump tweets with fury, says impeachment push helps him
Fifty-eight floors above Manhattan, President Donald Trump watched his legacy change and his political future grow more uncertain.
The president, back in his hometown of New York for the U.N. General
Assembly, was taking “executive time” at his Trump Tower penthouse late Tuesday
afternoon when Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced that the House was launching a
formal impeachment inquiry against him. Pelosi’s move increases the odds that
Trump will become the third U.S. president to be impeached.
It was a step more than 2½ years in the making and one that moves the
president farther down the path of self-styled political martyrdom.
The product of Trump’s norm-breaking presidency and Democrats’ lingering
anger over the outcome of the 2016 election, the impeachment inquiry has
largely been welcomed by the Republican president’s advisers, who believe it
could backfire against Democrats. The president himself said the move could help
his electoral chances, but he reacted in the moment with a cascade of angry
tweets that accused Democrats of engaging in “a witch hunt” and “presidential
harassment.”
A short time earlier, as word of Pelosi’s decision first emerged, an
agitated Trump sized up the politics of the moment and the developments that
have quickly enveloped his presidency since it was revealed that a
whistleblower complaint accused him of pressuring the leader of Ukraine to dig
up damaging material about political foe Joe Biden’s family.
“They’re going to lose the election,
and they figure this is a thing to do,” Trump told reporters. Speaking of
Pelosi, he added, “If she does that, they all say that’s a positive for me, for
the election. You could also say, ‘Who needs it? It’s bad for the country.’”
The revelations revolve in part around a July 25 phone call the
president had with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in which Trump is
said to have asked for help investigating Biden and his son Hunter. In the days
before the call, Trump ordered advisers to freeze $400 million in military aid
for Ukraine, prompting speculation that he was holding up the money as leverage
for information on the Bidens. Trump has denied that charge but acknowledged he
blocked the funds.
The West Wing and Trump’s informal advisers have been divided over how
to handle the story, according to the accounts of eight people who spoke on
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss
private conversations. Trump spent part of Monday night consulting with family
members and confidants over what to do next.
The president has alternately vented about what he sees as media and
Democratic attempts to overplay the Ukraine story line while believing that the
episode will work against his political foes. Frustrated by the rapid pace of
developments and how they have overshadowed his time at the United Nations,
Trump said he believed this was the Democrats trying to get a “do-over” after
failing to take him down with special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe.
For nearly a year, the White House as an institution and Trump personally
have been goading Democrats to open impeachment proceedings. They’ve refused
document requests and ignored subpoenas from Congress, claiming broad executive
privilege to prevent the testimony of administration officials and even of
people who’ve never formally worked at the White House.
His strategists have long believed impeachment could be a victory: that
the American public would view the move as a purely partisan maneuver that
would work against Democrats as it did for Republicans when they went that
route against Bill Clinton 20 years ago.
Clinton was not facing reelection; Trump will be on the ballot in 14
months. Moreover, while Trump has largely been convinced by aides that
impeachment could be good for his political future, the superstitious,
legacy-minded president has told confidants that he is worried that, even if
the GOP-controlled Senate were to acquit him as expected, impeachment would
become the first line of his political obituary.
As word of the whistleblower complaint slowly made its way through the
White House, initial concerns about what the president said on the call quickly
gave way to the same sense of defiance that has defined the administration’s
interactions with Congress. One administration official said there were intense
divisions among the West Wing staff and lawyers on whether to release the
transcript, a move they believed would exonerate the president but set a
dangerous precedent for future administrations. It also could ease the very
tensions with Congress that the White House has seen to be politically advantageous.
Even while Trump was weighing whether to authorize the release, he
insisted to those around him that the transcript would clear him of any
wrongdoing. And he and his closest allies believe that when more is known about
the Biden family’s involvement in Ukraine, it could damage the electoral
prospects of the one candidate Trump himself has mused could peel off some his
support among white working-class voters in the Midwest.
By Tuesday, as it became clear that House Democrats were set on an
impeachment inquiry, Trump approved release of the “unredacted” transcript.
“You will see it was a very friendly and totally appropriate call,” he tweeted
between meetings at the United Nations. “No pressure.”
Most aides believe that Trump’s vague, wink-wink style of speaking would
not lend itself to the discovery of a smoking gun in the transcript. But it’s
possible the White House will authorize the release of the entire whistleblower
complaint to Congress by the end of the week.
As Democrats pursue impeachment, Trump and his allies believe it could
make him a martyr in the eyes of his faithful, providing the necessary
motivation to bring his supporters to the polls in droves. Trump’s reelection
strategy hinges on turning out die-hard supporters who are unreliable voters
rather than winning over skeptics at the center of the electorate. Trump is
betting that anger at what he claims is Democratic mistreatment will prove to
be a political motivator, and that impeachment proceedings will only add to the
nation’s pox-on-both-houses view of Washington.
After Pelosi’s Tuesday afternoon announcement, the president and his
reelection team swung into high gear, releasing a series of tweets attacking
Democrats, including a video of presidential critics like the speaker and Rep.
Ilhan Omar discussing impeachment. It concluded with a message for the Trump
base: “While Democrats ‘Sole Focus’ is fighting Trump, President Trump is
fighting for you.”
But while the campaign set a confident tone, the angry tweets from the
Trump Tower penthouse kept coming as the last light faded from the Manhattan
sky.