House Democrats subpoena White House over Ukraine documents

House Democrats have subpoenaed the White House demanding documents that could shed light on Trump’s efforts to pressure Ukraine, in the latest escalation of their impeachment investigation into the president and his administration.
The move comes as the senior Democrats also formally
requested documents relating to Ukraine dealings from Mike Pence, the
vice-president.
The subpoena, issued late Friday, follows numerous
appeals for the White House to produce documents voluntarily. The letter,
addressed to the acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, and signed by
Representatives Elijah Cummings, Adam Schiff and Eliot Engel, accuses the
president of “stonewalling” and says they were left “with no choice” but to
subpoena.
“It appears clear that the president has chosen the
path of defiance, obstruction, and cover-up,” the letter reads, warning that
failure to comply – even at the direction of the president – “shall constitute
evidence of obstruction of the House’s impeachment inquiry”.
The House investigators also want Pence to give them
documents that could shed light on whether he helped Trump pressure Ukraine to
investigate Joe Biden, the former vice-president and leading Democratic
candidate for the 2020 nomination.
Another letter sent earlier by Schiff, Cummings and
Engel – the chairs, respectively, of the House intelligence, oversight and
foreign affairs committees – cites reports that a Pence aide may have listened
to the 25 July phone call in which Trump pushed Ukraine’s new president – who
was waiting for hundreds of millions of dollars of US military aid that had
been withheld – to investigate unfounded charges that Biden was involved in corrupt
activities there.
The chairmen say they also want to learn more about a
meeting Pence had on 1 September with Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the Ukrainian
president.
The letter says there are “questions about any role
you may have played in conveying or reinforcing the president’s stark message
to the Ukrainian president”.
The development came as Trump said the White House was
also preparing a letter – this one to House speaker Nancy Pelosi. Its intention
is to formally object to the Democrats commencing their impeachment inquiry
without an official vote on it in Congress – but admits that if a vote were
held he believes it would pass.
The letter is expected to say the administration will
not cooperate with the inquiry without that vote. Trump acknowledged that
Democrats in the House “have the votes” to begin a formal impeachment inquiry,
but said he is confident they do not have the votes to convict in the
Republican-controlled Senate.
“We’ll be issuing a letter. As everybody knows, we’ve
been treated very unfairly, very different from anybody else,” he said.
The move appears to represent a fresh attempt to
undermine and frustrate the impeachment inquiry, and comes after the explosive
release of text messages between US diplomats and an assistant to Zelenskiy.
The exchanges discuss Zelenskiy being told that a prestigious White House visit
to meet Trump was dependent on him making a public statement vowing to
investigate Hunter Biden, Joe’s son, and lending credence to a Trump conspiracy
theory about a Ukrainian role in the 2016 elections.
Trump openly called on China and Ukraine to
investigate the Bidens this week, but he continued to deny wrongdoing on
Friday, repeating his refrain there was no “quid pro quo” attached to the
requests. The text messages reveal that this was not the understanding of US
diplomats dealing with Ukraine.
In a tweet, Trump said the presidency gave him “an
absolute right, perhaps even a duty, to investigate or have investigated,
CORRUPTION, and that would include asking, or suggesting, other Countries to
help us out!”
In response, Schiff, the intelligence committee chair,
tweeted: “It comes down to this. We’ve cut through the denials. The
deflections. The nonsense. Donald Trump believes he can pressure a foreign
nation to help him politically. It’s his “right.” Every Republican in Congress
has to decide: is he right?”
On Friday, the White House press secretary, Stephanie
Grisham, said the House impeachment inquiry subpoena “changes nothing – just
more document requests, wasted time, and taxpayer dollars that will ultimately
show the President did nothing wrong”.
Trump, senior Republicans, and prominent conservative
media figures are either counter-attacking or remaining silent.
Most Republican senators remained quiet on Friday, but
the 2012 presidential candidate and current Utah senator Mitt Romney issued a
statement that said “the president’s brazen and unprecedented appeal to China
and to Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden is wrong and appalling”.
As the impeachment scandal continues to escalate, the
House intelligence committee, one of six that are holding impeachment hearings
into Trump’s conduct, questioned the intelligence community inspector general,
Michael Atkinson, behind closed doors.
Republicans are aggressively questioning the absence
of an official vote on impeachment prior to the inquiry formally beginning.
In announcing that the House was beginning the
investigation, Pelosi did not seek the consent of the full chamber, as was done
for impeachment investigations into former presidents Richard Nixon and Bill
Clinton.
Pelosi swatted it back as unnecessary, saying the
House is well within its rules to pursue the inquiry without taking a vote.
“The existing rules of the House provide House
committees with full authority to conduct investigations for all matters under
their jurisdiction, including impeachment investigations,” Pelosi wrote
Thursday in a letter to House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy after he, too,
pressed for a floor vote.
Pelosi has sought to avoid a vote on the impeachment
inquiry for the same reason she resisted, for months, liberal calls to try to
remove the president: it would force moderate House Democrats to make a
politically risky vote.