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LIVE: Impeachment Trial Q&A Enters Last Day Before Moving To Vote On Witnesses

In this image from video, White House counsel Pat Cipollone answers a question during the impeachment trial against President Trump in the Senate.
Senate Television via AP
In this image from video, White House counsel Pat Cipollone answers a question during the impeachment trial against President Trump in the Senate.

Senators weighing impeachment charges against President Trump will spend Thursday firing off questions to trial lawyers, as they did the day before, just as the specter of John Bolton's appearance as a witness continues to stoke speculation.

Watch the proceedings live beginning at 1 p.m. ET.

Republicans would like Trump to be acquitted as early as Friday, but Democrats are working behind the scenes to recruit enough conservatives to support bringing in witnesses to testify.

That effort is flagging, senators say.

"The momentum is clearly in the direction of moving to final judgment on Friday," said Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wy. "We still have a couple members who said they want to listen to answers to questions, but that's where the momentum is in the caucus right now."

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., also gave his assessment on where the votes stand on possibly bringing in witnesses. "Probably no," Schumer told reporters. "But is it a decent, good chance? Yes."

Democrats need to persuade at least four senators to cross party lines in order to lock in enough votes to subpoena witnesses. And while a handful of moderate Republicans have indicated they are open to hearing from witnesses, the prospect of Democrats successfully enlisting enough conservatives to join their witness push looked increasingly dim. Democratic leaders have conceded that it now appears unlikely.

Meanwhile, Republicans spent some time on Wednesday saying that once the door is open to witnesses, Republicans would like to call individuals including Joe Biden's son Hunter, who had served on a Ukrainian energy company board, and the anonymous whistleblower whose intelligence community complaint about Trump's July 25 call with the Ukrainian president set the impeachment process into motion.

Asked what kind of delay witnesses would add to the trial, Trump defense lawyer Jay Sekulow said "months."

Sekulow added: "This would be the first of many weeks."

House impeachment manager Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., bristled at this argument, saying Trump's defense team is exaggerating the delay to discourage senators from supporting calling witnesses, including Bolton, the former national security adviser, whose possible appearance in the trial has captured Washington since revelations from his forthcoming book were publicly leaked.

"You can subpoena John Bolton ...," Schiff said. "Don't be thrown off by this claim, 'Oh, if you even think about it, we are going to make you pay with delays like you've never seen. We're going to call witnesses that will turn this into a circus.' It shouldn't be a circus. It should be a fair trial. You can't have a fair trial without witnesses."

Some Republicans have been discussing a possible deal involving a witness-for-witness swap. Some conservatives were entertaining the idea of calling Hunter Biden as their witness.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said if Republicans are able to call just one witness it will be Hunter Biden.

"Because he's incredibly relevant to whether or not President Trump had a reason to believe that corruption was afoot in the Ukraine," Graham told reporters on Wednesday.

Over eight hours of debate Wednesday, Democratic House managers and Trump's defense made their final pitches ahead of a key vote on Friday on whether the Senate will hear from witnesses.

White House lawyer Pat Philbin defended accepting "credible" informationfrom foreign sources about someone running for public office, arguing that "mere information is not something that would violate the campaign finance laws." Democrats, including Schiff and several senators, quickly lashed out. Schiff called that policy "corruption." Sen. Debbie Stabenow said Democrats were in "shock" hearing the defense and Sen. Mark Warner said he was "flabbergasted."

Also among the more striking responses: a question posed by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. Cruz asked whether a president ordering a quid pro quo in the foreign policy arena was ever appropriate.

The question was relevant to the heart of the articles of impeachment, which center on an allegation that Trump conditioned hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid to Ukraine on the country announcing investigations into Trump's political rivals. In other words, Democrats are accusing Trump of abusing his office by using a quid-pro-quo scheme to improve his chances of reelection.

Alan Dershowitz, one of Trump's lawyers, took the sweeping view that if a quid pro quo is in the president's "electoral interest," then it should never result in an impeachment, a broad interpretation of the powers of the executive branch.

"If a president does something which he believes will help him get elected in the public interest, that cannot be the kind of quid pro quo that results in impeachment," Dershowitz said.

Dershowitz said if a president does not act out of purely a "corrupt motive," but rather has a "mixed motive," meaning a president is acting of the country's interest and in hopes of improving reelection prospects, then the behavior cannot warrant articles of impeachment.

"How many presidents have made foreign policy decisions after checking with their political advisers and pollsters?" he asked.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said that argument brought Dershowitz "into the land of legal absurdity." Furthermore, he tweeted, "That anything a public official does for re-election is OK. That cannot be true."

Evaluating the first of two days of question and answers, Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., said he did not think the day's proceedings changed any minds.

"I don't think so in large measure, but it does force everyone to confront issues that sometimes you haven't thought as much about or sometimes you are familiar with, but not to the level of depth that you should," Casey said.

With a strong Republican majority in the Senate, Trump is expected to be acquitted.
Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Jonese Franklin