Trump news: President's Ukraine call was part of 'illicit and corrupt scheme', released testimonies say
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Your support makes all the difference.Before public hearings begin in the impeachment investigation into Donald Trump, recently released transcripts of testimonies from two key witnesses offer a more complete picture of the president's dealings with Ukraine and the role of his attorney Rudy Giuliani.
Lt Col Alexander Vindman testified that "no doubt" the president was asking for investigations into his political rivals, and Fiona Hill warned that Mr Giuliani was peddling conspiracy theories to Mr Trump that could make US elections in 2020 vulnerable to Russian influence.
Mr Trump told reporters at the White House he is considering Vladimir Putin’s invitation to attend Moscow’s Victory Day parade and is planning to release a new transcript of an earlier call with Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in an attempt to clear his name with the House impeachment inquiry ongoing.
As the president’s acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney failed to show up for his deposition to the inquiry despite being issued with a subpoena late on Thursday, Democratic congressman Danny Heck has dismissed the significance of the White House’s refusal to co-operate, saying the panel has already amassed “a mountain of evidence” against the president.
Steve Bannon, Mr Trump's former White House chief strategist and a key figure in his campaign, testified in the trial of Roger Stone that Mr Stone was the campaign's "access point" for WikiLeaks and Julian Assange.
But Mr Bannon did not say whether the president had actually ever relied on Mr Stone to deliver information from the organisation. He believes Mr Stone knew about Hillary Clinton's campaign emails that WikiLeaks planned to release.
Mr Stone is on trial for witness tampering and lying to Congress about his role in the WikiLeaks scandal, which prosecutors argue Mr Stone had arranged to deliver information on Mr Trump's political rivals in order to protect the president.
Meanwhile, the latest excerpts from A Warning, the new book by an anonymous administration insider, has revealed Mr Trump’s senior staff once considered resigning en masse in response to the president’s behaviour, which the mystery author characterises as volatile and incompetent.
The president ended his week announcing plans to take his tax case to the Supreme Court, which will decide whether take up Mr Trump's attempt to block a subpoena from the Manhattan District Attorney seeking his tax records.
Follow along as it happened in our liveblog.
Hello and welcome to The Independent's rolling coverage of the Donald Trump administration.
Mick Mulvaney expected to snub subpoena as House impeachment investigator says 'mountain of evidence' amassed
Democratic congressman Danny Heck has dismissed the significance of the White House’s refusal to co-operate with the House impeachment inquiry, saying the panel has already amassed “a mountain of evidence” against Donald Trump.
"I think there's more evidence to the effect that the president shook down Ukraine, tried to cover it up, and threatened to and then withheld security assistance to Ukraine than there is evidence that the sun will come up in the East tomorrow," Heck said.
Ex-national security adviser John Bolton on Thursday became the tenth scheduled witness not to turn up to give a deposition this week, with the House team since issuing a subpoena to the president’s acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney that he is not expected to respond to. Mark Sandy, the associate director for national security programmes at the White House Office of Management and Budget, is also scheduled to appear on Friday, but probably will not do so either.
An official working on the inquiry said the House intelligence panel subpoenaed Mulvaney because other testimony indicated he "could shed additional light on the president's abuse of the power of his office for his personal gain," according to the AP.
Mick Mulvaney (Evan Vucci/AP)
Mulvaney said in a news conference last month that the Trump administration's decision to hold up military aid was linked to Trump's demand for the investigations. He later walked back his remarks, but Democrats said that was tantamount to a confession and have cited it as evidence in their inquiry.
Democrats say they will use the high-profile no-shows - like that of energy secretary Rick Perry - as evidence of the president's obstruction of Congress.
A slew of current and former officials from the State Department and White House have appeared over the last several weeks and largely corroborated the same narrative - that Trump had delegated his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, to guide US-Ukraine policy and that the two men were focused on pressuring Ukraine as the administration withheld military aid from the country.
New book reveals Trump's senior staff plotted 'midnight self-massacre'
The latest excerpts from A Warning, the new book by an anonymous administration insider, has revealed that Trump’s senior staff once considered resigning en masse - phrased as a "midnight self-massacre" - in response to the president’s behaviour, which the author characterises as volatile and incompetent, according to The Washington Post.
The author, who wrote an explosive op-ed for The New York Times last year, now expresses pessimism about being able to influence the president:
Unelected bureaucrats and cabinet appointees were never going to steer Donald Trump the right direction in the long run, or refine his malignant management style. He is who he is.
White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham released a statement late on Thursday, saying: "The coward who wrote this book didn't put their name on it because it is nothing but lies."
Here's Jon Sharman's report.
Trump 'regularly stumbles, slurs and gets confused'
Another revelation from A Warning is that there are serious concerns about the president's health. The mystery writer discloses that Trump "regularly stumbles, slurs and gets confused", something we've often seen at the podium or in Q&As when he frequently struggles to read an autocue or pronounce words. Who could forget "the oranges of the inquiry"?
“I am not qualified to diagnose the president’s mental acuity," writes the book's author. "All I can tell you is that normal people who spend any time with Donald Trump are uncomfortable by what they witness."
Here's more from Peter Stubley.
Rudy Giuliani led 'campaign of slander' to oust ambassador, George Kent told inquiry
House Intelligence Committee chairman Adam Schiff, who is spearheading the impeachment inquiry, has been releasing transcripts of the marathon behind-closed-door interviews his team have been conducting so far all week and last night saw the publication of their conversation with State Department official George Kent.
Deputy assistant secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs - as well as a natty dresser - Kent told congressmen and women on Capitol Hill that Rudy Guiliani had led "a campaign of lies and misinformation" to oust US ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch prior to her being recalled from Kiev in May.
"I believe that Mr Giuliani, as a US citizen, has First Amendment rights to say whatever he wants, but he's a private citizen," Kent said. "His assertions and allegations against former Ambassador Yovanovitch were without basis, untrue, period."
President Trump "wanted nothing less than President [Volodymyr] Zelensky to go to the microphone and say: investigations, Biden, and Clinton," the 27-year foreign service veteran also asserts in the transcript, citing Yovanovitch's acting successor, Bill Taylor.
Here's Andrew Buncombe's report.
Trump lashes out at New York attorney general for 'deliberately mischaracterising' lawsuit against him
The president last night issued an angry, all-caps statement on Twitter attacking New York's attorney general Letitia James, accusing her of “deliberately mischaracterising” a settlement in a lawsuit involving his charity for “political purposes”.
"I am the only person I know, perhaps the only person in history, who can give major money to charity ($19M), charge no expense, and be attacked by the political hacks in New York State. No wonder why we are all leaving!" Trump frothed. "Every penny of the $19 million raised by the Trump Foundation went to hundreds of great charitable causes with almost no expenses. The New York Attorney General is deliberately mischaracterizing this settlement for political purposes."
What prompted the beef was the news that the president has been ordered to pay $2m (£1.6m) to several nonprofit organisations after using the foundation that bears his name as his personal "chequebook".
A judge sided with a New York-led lawsuit that alleged Trump and his three eldest children - Ivanka, Donald Jr and Eric Trump - had made "persistent" violations of federal and state campaign finance laws and abused the tax exempt status of the Donald J Trump Foundation by using it as "little more than a chequebook" to serve the president and his business and political interests, according to the suit.
Here's Alex Woodward with some background.
President 'put on Hispanic accent' to mock migrants arriving at US-Mexico border
A further revelation from A Warning alleges that Trump put on a Hispanic accent in the Oval Office to deride asylum seekers arriving at the US southern border from Central America.
“We get these women coming in with like seven children,” the president said, according to the forthcoming book. “They are saying, ‘Oh, please help! My husband left me!’ They are useless. They don’t do anything for our country. At least if they came in with a husband we could put him in the fields to pick corn or something.”
Wow. That's about as racist as it gets.
Here's Zamira Rahim's report.
Whistleblower's lawyer sends cease and desist letter to White House over persistent attacks
Andrew Bakaj, one of the attorneys representing the CIA whistleblower at the heart of the impeachment inquiry, has sent a cease and desist letter to his White House counterpart Pat Cipollone demanding an end to Trump's persistent attacks on his client.
"I am writing to respectfully request that you counsel your client on the legal and ethical peril in which he is placing himself should anyone be physically harmed as a result of his, or his surrogates', behavior," Bakaj wrote to Cipollone, adding that the president is "engaging in rhetoric and activity that places my client, the Intelligence Community Whistleblower, and their family in physical danger."
Trump has repeatedly demanded the individual who complained about his 25 July call with President Zelensky come forward and denounced them on Twitter, encouraging the idea among his support base that the complaint is part of deep state conspiracy or "witch hunt" against him.
His son Don Jr and former aide Sebastian Gorka were meanwhile among those to have answered Kentucky senator Rand Paul's call to name the suspected informant on Twitter earlier this week, while Paul himself blocked a Senate resolution reaffirming Congress's commitment to safeguarding whisteblowers on Wednesday.
Sean Hannity rants on Twitter after his name twice crops up in impeachment inquiry transcripts
Fox News host Sean Hannity has demanded that government employees “stop lying" about him after it was revealed he had been mentioned by two separate officials in their depositions to the impeachment inquiry.
Hannity's name has cropped up twice in the investigation so far in relation to his considerable influence over Trump, as recorded in the transcripts of the testimonies by Marie Yovanovitch and George Kent, prompting the right-wing anchor (don't say that phrase too fast) to demand on Twitter: "I STRONGLY ADVISE ALL OF YOU TO STOP LYING ABOUT ME."
He certainly sounds anxious.
Here's Vincent Wood with more.
Donald Trump Jr and Kimberly Guilfoyle given torrid time on morning chat show The View
The aforementioned Don Jr and his girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle - formerly of Fox - appeared on ABC chat show The View on Thursday and were given a torrid time by the panel, with co-host Megan McCain (whose late father Trump Sr regulalrly insulted, even after death) telling her guest: "You and your family have hurt a lot of people."
Asked by another host, Joy Behar, about some of the president's most controversial moments - calling Mexican's "rapists", the Access Hollywood tape - Don Jr countered: We've all done things that we regret, I mean, if we're talking about bringing the discourse down, Joy, you've worn blackface.”
As Behar scrambled to deny that accusation, he turned to Whoopi Goldberg and continued: "You’ve said that Roman Polanski, it wasn't ‘rape’ rape when he raped a child. So let's talk about serious things."
Goldberg, clearly irritated, was forced to throw to a commercial break.
Vincent Wood has the whole story.
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