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Trump Impeachment Vote Live Updates: After Hours of Speeches, the House Voted to Impeach Trump on Two Counts What to Watch For Before the Impeachment Vote
(32 minutes later)
The House of Representatives on Wednesday impeached President Trump, charging him with “high crimes and misdemeanors” and making him only the third president in history to face removal by the Senate. The House of Representatives plans to open debate on Wednesday over whether to impeach the president for the third time in American history as Democrats bring forward two articles of impeachment charging President Trump with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
The votes on two articles of impeachment abuse of power and obstruction of Congress fell largely along party lines, after about eight hours of contentious debate that underscored the deep divisions in the country and among its representatives. The debate will fall sharply along party lines, with Democrats asserting that Mr. Trump committed high crimes and misdemeanors by pressuring Ukraine to tarnish Democratic rivals to aid his re-election campaign while Republicans argue that the majority was engaged in a partisan witch hunt against a president they fear they could not beat at the polls. The House plans to vote by the end of the day.
All but two Democrats supported the article on abuse of power, which accused Mr. Trump of using the power of his office to pressure Ukraine’s government to announce investigations that could discredit his political rivals. The vote was 230 to 197. Rough Rundown of the Day:
A third Democrat, Representative Jared Golden of Maine, joined with Republicans in opposing the obstruction of Congress charge. The vote was 229 to 198. In the morning, the House is expected to vote to adopt the rules that the House Rules Committee hashed out on Tuesday. This will be the first procedural vote by the full chamber to lay the groundwork for formally impeaching Mr. Trump.
No Republicans voted in favor of either article of impeachment. Representative Justin Amash, Independent of Michigan, voted for both articles. Early in the day, expect a lot of parliamentary moves by the Republicans to register their opposition and slow the process, which could lead to multiple procedural votes that don’t amount to much. The votes everyone is waiting for on the two articles of impeachment are expected in the evening, most likely between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. The House will hold a separate vote on each of the two articles.
Representative Tulsi Gabbard, a Hawaii Democrat who is running for president, voted “present” on both articles of impeachment. She said in a statement that she could not “in good conscience” vote either yes or no. The House may also vote to empower Speaker Nancy Pelosi to name impeachment managers, whose identities are likely to become public in the coming days. The managers are House members who act much like prosecutors in the impeachment trial to come in the Senate, presenting the findings of the House inquiry to their colleagues across the Capitol. Senators decide whether to acquit the president or convict and remove him from office, which requires a two-thirds vote, or 67 senators if all are present.
“I am standing in the center and have decided to vote Present. I could not in good conscience vote against impeachment because I believe President Trump is guilty of wrongdoing,” she said. When and Where: The morning proceedings are likely to start around 9 a.m. Eastern on the House floor.
“I also could not in good conscience vote for impeachment because removal of a sitting President must not be the culmination of a partisan process, fueled by tribal animosities that have so gravely divided our country,” she added. How to Watch: The New York Times will stream the testimony live, and a team of reporters in Washington will provide updates and analysis of the events on Capitol Hill. Follow along at nytimes.com, starting a few minutes before 9.
A historic trial in the Senate is expected to begin early next year, giving senators the final say on whether to acquit the 45th president or convict and remove him from office. Acquittal in the Republican-controlled chamber is likely. House Democrats head into the debate with the 218 votes they need to pass the articles of impeachment already in their pocket, according to a survey of members by The New York Times, but that will not stop members on both sides from engaging in hours of passionate and even angry debate before the roll is called.
Mr. Trump set the tone on Tuesday with an aggrieved and hectoring six-page letter to Ms. Pelosi accusing her of “declaring open war on American Democracy” with “an illegal, partisan attempted coup” that he called a “perversion of justice and abuse of power.” He complained he was being railroaded: “More due process was afforded to those accused in the Salem Witch Trials.”
At a campaign rally in Battle Creek, Michigan, Mr. Trump condemned the impeachment inquiry as a “hoax” and said he was confident that he would be acquitted in the Senate. Republicans will almost surely pick up many of his points on the floor on Wednesday, while Democrats make their case that Mr. Trump put his own political interests ahead of those of the country by withholding American security aid from Ukraine even as he pressed the country’s new president to announce investigations into former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and other Democrats.
“We didn’t lose one Republican vote, and three Democrats voted for us,” Mr. Trump announced to howls of approval from the raucous crowd. “The Republican Party has never been so united as they are right now. Never. Never.” If the House, as expected, approves both of the articles, Mr. Trump will find himself in the company of Presidents Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton, who were the other presidents impeached. President Richard M. Nixon resigned after the House Judiciary Committee approved articles of impeachment but before the full House could vote. Both Mr. Johnson and Mr. Clinton went on to be acquitted in a Senate trial, and by all accounts, it looks as if Mr. Trump will follow that pattern as well.
He said senators “are going to do the right thing.” With the final outcome seemingly preordained, perhaps the only suspense about the vote on Wednesday will be how many Democrats break with the party and oppose impeachment.
Mr. Trump took the stage at just after 8 p.m. at the 9,800-seat Kellogg Arena in Battle Creek, Mich., where a rowdy crowd had been eagerly awaiting his appearance onstage as music blared through the chilly auditorium. Two House Democrats who registered their opposition to the inquiry by voting against its ground rules in October, Representatives Collin C. Peterson of Minnesota and Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, plan to vote against the articles as well and Mr. Van Drew is expected to leave the party altogether to become a Republican.
“It doesn’t really feel like we’re being impeached,” Mr. Trump told the crowd. “The country is doing better than ever before. We did nothing wrong. We have tremendous support in the Republican Party like we’ve never had before.” Another 14 Democrats have said they were undecided or have not responded to The Times’s survey, but only one of them, Representative Ron Kind of Wisconsin, represents a district won by Mr. Trump. The rest of the so-called front-line Democrats representing Republican areas announced their support for impeachment in recent days, suggesting that the party was rallying behind the effort.
Once the House impeached him, Mr. Trump mocked Democrats for conducting what he said was an unfair attack on his presidency. No Republican has announced support for impeachment and while 30 have not said how they would vote, few expect any to break with the president.
“I’m not worried. I’m not worried. Because, it’s always good,” Mr. Trump said. “But, you don’t do anything wrong and you get impeached. That may be a record that will last forever. But you know what they have done? They have cheapened the impeachment process.” Mr. Trump and his advisers repeatedly pressured President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine for investigations that could benefit Mr. Trump politically, including one of Mr. Biden. Here’s a timeline of events since January.
The Trump campaign event, scheduled before organizers knew the House would hold its impeachment vote on Wednesday, was billed as a “Merry Christmas Rally.” The stage was flanked by two large Christmas trees topped by the campaign’s signature red “Make America Great Again” hats in lieu of stars. 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.
Democrats designed Wednesday’s impeachment debate to last for six hours, but it played out in one to two-minute bursts as individual lawmakers strode to the microphones to quickly deliver their conclusions about whether Mr. Trump abused his office and obstructed Congress. Ms. Pelosi announced in September that the House would open a formal impeachment proceeding and this month directed Democrats to draft articles of impeachment. Here’s how the impeachment process works, and here’s why political influence in foreign policy matters.
Under the rules adopted by the House, the debate Ping-Pongs between Republicans and Democrats, managed by the chairman and ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee. House committees have issued subpoenas to the White House, the Defense Department, the White House budget office and other agencies for documents related to the impeachment investigation. Here’s the evidence that was collected.
Here is a flavor of the back and forth: Read about the Democrats’ rules to govern impeachment proceedings.
K. Michael Conaway, Republican of Texas: “Many of my colleagues have diminished what should be a solemn and grave proceeding into an absolute political circus.”
Ted Lieu, Democrat of California: “This impeachment is permanent. It will follow him around for the rest of his life and history books will record it. And the people will know why we impeached. It’s all very simple. No one is above the law.”
Tom McClintock, Republican of California: “This is a stunning abuse of power and a shameless travesty of justice that will stain the reputations of those responsible for generations to come.”
Steve Cohen, Democrat of Tennessee: “Donald Trump used the high power of the presidency to pressure a foreign nation to besmirch his perceived primary political opponent.”
Clay Higgins, Republican of Louisiana: “America is being severely injured by this betrayal, by this unjust and weaponized impeachment, brought upon us by the same socialists who threaten unborn life in the womb, who threaten First Amendment rights of conservatives.”
Hank Johnson, Democrat of Georgia: “If you think I exaggerate in warning that our elections can be undermined, I’d urge you to come down to Georgia, find a black man or woman of a certain age, and they’ll tell you the danger is real.”
Chris Stewart, Republican of Utah: “This day is about one thing and one thing only. They hate this president. They hate those of us who voted for him. They think we are stupid. They think we made a mistake. They think Hillary Clinton should be the president and they want to fix that.”
Jerrold Nadler, Democrat of New York: “I would remind the gentleman if President Trump is impeached and removed, the new president would be Mike Pence, not Hillary Clinton.”
In an apparent attempt to spread both holiday cheer and a political message, a White House aide on Wednesday distributed a yuletide gift to Democratic senators: a large embossed card bidding them a Merry Christmas.
But inside the card was a copy of President Trump’s rambling, angry six-page letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi accusing House Democrats of “subverting America’s democracy” by moving ahead with impeachment. The card was signed by both Mr. Trump and the first lady in red sharpie marker.
The package, delivered to the Capitol as the House inched closer to impeaching Mr. Trump, struck some lawmakers as eminently bizarre.
“What a day,” Senator Christopher S. Murphy, Democrat of Connecticut, said.
The iconic picture of a crying migrant girl at the border loomed large, blown up to poster size and emblazoned with the words “IMPEACH NOW,” as Representative Al Green, Democrat of Texas, told his colleagues that Mr. Trump should be impeached “for the sake of the many who are suffering.”
Republicans have repeatedly cited Mr. Green, who began calling for the president to be impeached in 2017, as evidence that Democrats have used the Ukraine matter as an excuse to force Mr. Trump out of office because they oppose his policies. The House blocked an article of impeachment that Mr. Green introduced in July.
“President Trump is keeping his campaign promises and you hate him for that,” said Representative Glenn Grothman, Republican of Wisconsin.
Democratic leaders have repeatedly insisted that no president should be impeached for policy disagreements. But others, like Mr. Green, unapologetically conceded during Wednesday’s debate that they believe Mr. Trump deserves to be forced from office not just for his conduct related to Ukraine, but for the way he governs.
House Democrats sent bills to the Senate only to watch them wither under dismissive Republican leadership on scores of occasions this year. They braced themselves to do so yet again on Wednesday, but this moment carried a weight all its own.
This was no election security measure or minimum wage increase or drug pricing legislation. It was two articles of impeachment against Donald John Trump, a historic condemnation of the 45th president of the United States, a polarizing figure who nonetheless remains popular in the districts of dozens of Democrats who provided the party the House majority that enabled the action against him.
The effort to remove the president from office carries inherent political risks. But they are particularly wrenching for Democrats knowing that their votes will not, barring some entirely unexpected turn of events, lead to Senate conviction of Mr. Trump and his immediate departure from the White House. They are putting themselves on the line not for an outcome but for a principle.— Carl Hulse
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi opened debate in the House of Representatives on Wednesday on the articles of impeachment against President Trump, declaring that lawmakers are “custodians of the Constitution” and urging her colleagues to honor their oaths by charging him with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
“Today, as speaker of the House, I solemnly and sadly open the debate on the impeachment of the president of the United States,” Ms. Pelosi said as the chamber began six hours of debate on the two articles.
Ms. Pelosi took the floor on Wednesday dressed in a dark suit, a nod to what she has long said would be a solemn day, and a carefully-chosen accessory: a gold brooch fashioned as the Mace of the Republic, also known as the speaker’s mace.
“Our founder’s vision of a republic is under threat from actions from the White House,” she said somberly, adding, “If we do not act now, we would be derelict in our duty. It is tragic that the president’s reckless actions make impeachment necessary. He gave us no choice.”
When she concluded her remarks, Democrats gave the speaker a standing ovation while Republicans chanted “regular order” to quiet the chamber.
Representative Doug Collins of Georgia, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, spoke first for the Republicans, rising to oppose the articles and accusing Democrats of conducting an unfair and illegitimate impeachment inquiry that had not proven Mr. Trump guilty.
“This is an impeachment based on presumption,” Mr. Collins said. “This is a poll-tested impeachment about what actually sells to the American people. Today is going to be a lot of things. What it is not is fair. What it is not is about the truth.”
As the House was debating Mr. Trump’s impeachment, his counselor, Kellyanne Conway, huddled with Senate Republicans on Capitol Hill in preparation for a Senate trial to determine Mr. Trump’s fate, likely in January.
Over lunch, Ms. Conway delivered a presentation of polls that the White House believes shows public support for Mr. Trump and his party. Speaking to reporters afterward, she cited in particular an ABC News/Washington Post poll showing 62 percent of Americans believed that there would be a fair trial in the Senate.
“I was very happy to deliver that message to Republicans in the Senate,” she said.
The poll also found 7 in 10 Americans said the president should allow his top aides to testify during the trial. (Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, on Tuesday rejected demands by Democrats to call four White House officials as witnesses.)
Ms. Conway criticized the House for what she called “specious and very spare articles” of impeachment. And while Mr. Trump has pushed for a lengthy trial, she told reporters, “I think short versus long is less important than full and fair.”
Later, Ms. Conway told reporters in the White House briefing room that the president was in good spirits. Her portrait of a happy-go-lucky president seemed to contrast with several angry tweets sent by the president, and with an angry six-page letter he sent to Ms. Pelosi a day earlier.
“The President is fine,” Ms. Conway said. “His mood is good.”
As the House debate unfolded on Wednesday, the rest of Washington seemed to be functioning as usual. A crowd of power brokers huddled around tables at the Four Seasons hotel in Georgetown. People sitting around the sunny dining room craned their necks to see who else was in the vicinity, and at least one reporter could be heard pitching a story.
Across town, a group of dozens of protesters outside of the Capitol as were divided as the politicians inside. A man dressed in Santa costume rode around on a One Wheel decorated as a sleigh as women nearby carried signs saying “Give the Gift of Impeachment” and “All I Want for Christmas is for Congress to Impeach.”
A Trump supporter stood in the center of a group of people who were there in support of impeachment — “You’ve been programmed! Brain washed! By the deep state!” he shouted, as people in the group took turns calling him racist.
Mark Kampf, a 65-year-old voice actor who traveled here from Pahrump, Nev., held up a sign that read “Impeach Pelosi (A.K.A. the Devil),” and said he wanted to make sure his views were represented.
“I think she’s been plotting to take down the president,” Mr. Kampf said of Ms. Pelosi, echoing the president’s beliefs, “as admitted on T.V., for two and a half years.”
Ilana Rios, a 20-year-old student, stood away from the main group of protesters and said she was still trying to hear both sides, a comment that made her a rarity in a polarized capital.
“I don’t think it’s right for people to say they’re above the law,” Ms. Rios said. She added that she shares some of the beliefs Mr. Trump has on hardening American immigration policies, but added that “I don’t think it’s right to keep him here in government.”— Katie Rogers and Lola Fadulu
It was a momentous day in American history. But, by all indications, it was not a momentous day in the lives of most Americans.
So while the House of Representatives debated the impeachment of President Trump on Wednesday, one man in Houston was more focused on a $279 speeding ticket. Tourists in Chicago savored an impeachment-free shopping day. Members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 401 in Albuquerque followed a simple mantra: “Anything but politics, man.”
Americans may be deeply invested in the outcome, but as history played out, many of them were taking whatever opportunity they could to look elsewhere.
Ms. Pelosi chose Representative Diana DeGette of Colorado, a veteran Democrat who had impressed her with a tough, skillful parliamentary hand, to preside over the historic debate on the articles of impeachment.
Ms. DeGette, first elected in 1996, was until this year the Democrats’ chief deputy whip — the member of leadership responsible for counting votes, known in congressional parlance as “whipping.” She has held the gavel more than a dozen times this year, rotating in and out of the chair as members customarily do.
— Sheryl Gay Stolberg
Mr. Trump may end his day as the third president in American history to be impeached, but he started it as the first president to live-tweet his own impeachment.
By noon, roughly three hours into the House proceedings, Mr. Trump had already posted or reposted 45 messages on Twitter, most of them condemning Democrats for seeking to charge him with high crimes and insisting he did nothing wrong.
“SUCH ATROCIOUS LIES BY THE RADICAL LEFT, DO NOTHING DEMOCRATS,” Mr. Trump said in one, all-caps tweet. “THIS IS AN ASSAULT ON AMERICA, AND AN ASSAULT ON THE REPUBLICAN PARTY!!!!”
In typical Trumpian fashion, he assailed Ms. Pelosi, Mr. Schiff and other Democrats in incendiary terms. “Will go down in history as worst Speaker,” he wrote about Ms. Pelosi at one point. “Already thrown out once!” he added, apparently a reference to the 2010 midterm elections when Republicans won the majority from Democrats before losing it to them again in 2018.
Coming a day after he sent Ms. Pelosi a six-page letter complaining about what he cast as the injustice of impeachment, Mr. Trump also insisted again that he did nothing wrong and tweaked Ms. Pelosi, who has said she was praying for the president.
“Can you believe that I will be impeached today by the Radical Left, Do Nothing Democrats, AND I DID NOTHING WRONG!” he wrote. “A terrible Thing. Read the Transcripts. This should never happen to another President again. Say a PRAYER!”
Traveling in Michigan, Mr. Pence called the impeachment effort “a disgrace” and said that Democrats are “trying to run down this president because they know they can’t run against our record.”
But like the president, Mr. Pence appeared to accept that impeachment was inevitable, adding: “Tonight after a sham investigation, do-nothing Democrats are going to vote on a partisan impeachment seeking to overturn the will of the American people.”
Assuming the House proceeds with impeachment as anticipated, the fate of Mr. Trump’s presidency will soon be in the hands of the Senate, whose leaders are already quarreling over how to put on a fair trial in an era of deep divisions.
Senators Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Chuck Schumer of New York, the Republican and Democratic leaders, hardly waited for the House vote to debate how to proceed. On Tuesday, Mr. McConnell rejected Mr. Schumer’s proposal to call four witnesses who did not testify in the House inquiry, arguing that it was not the Senate’s job to complete a rushed and inadequate investigation by the House.
Mr. McConnell was navigating a tricky position of balancing Mr. Trump’s desire for vindication through a trial and the positions of vulnerable Republican senators who are concerned that an abbreviated trial or one that seems tilted to Mr. Trump would make it look like they did not take the charges seriously.
The various sides will continue to try to formulate a plan for the trial on Wednesday even as the House formally decides whether one will be needed.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday chastised a reporter’s question about whether he would participate in a Senate impeachment trial, saying at a news conference that there were more important diplomatic issues.
Mr. Pompeo said that he would be “happy” to testify and to produce additional State Department documents to senators “if that’s appropriate and required by law.” Democrats who led the impeachment inquiry did not request that Mr. Pompeo testify even though several other witnesses discussed his involvement in the Ukraine matter.