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Trump Impeachment calls grow amid Ukraine row

Source BBC

President Donald Trump has acknowledged withholding US aid to Ukraine and pressuring it to investigate his would-be White House challenger Joe Biden.

But he denied using the funds as political leverage, insisting he only wanted Europe to step up assistance to the Eastern European country.

House Democrats are meeting to consider impeaching Mr Trump, and Mr Biden will release a statement later.

No US president has ever been removed from office by impeachment.

What exactly did President Trump say?

At the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on Tuesday, Mr Trump said he only froze military aid to Ukraine because he wanted European countries to contribute funds, too.

“We’re putting up the bulk of the money, and I’m asking why is that?” he said, adding: “What I want, and I insist on it, is that Europe has to put up money for Ukraine also.”

The Republican president also acknowledged pressuring newly elected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during a phone call on 25 July to investigate US Democratic presidential frontrunner Joe Biden.

“That call was perfect, it couldn’t have been nicer,” said Mr Trump, who is up for election next year. “There was no pressure put on them whatsoever.

“But there was pressure put on with respect to Joe Biden. What Joe Biden did for his son, that’s something they should be looking at.”

Later on Tuesday, Mr Trump told reporters: “Ask how his [Joe Biden’s] son made millions of dollars from Ukraine… even though he had no expertise whatsoever, OK.”

Mr Trump and his conservative allies have pointed out that Joe Biden, while US vice-president, threatened in 2016 to withhold aid to Ukraine unless it fired a top prosecutor whose office had been investigating a natural gas company where Hunter Biden was a board member.

Other Western officials had called for the same prosecutor to be removed on the grounds that he was soft on corruption. Ukraine’s current prosecutor, Yuriy Lutsenko, told Bloomberg News in May he had no evidence of wrongdoing by Mr Biden or his son.

Mr Trump’s latest remarks came after it emerged that days before his phone call with Mr Zelensky, the US president had instructed his acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, to withhold nearly $400m (£320m) in military aid for Ukraine.

Congressional Democrats have accused Mr Trump of trying to enlist a foreign power to smear a domestic opponent.

They are demanding a transcript of the phone call, which the White House has declined to release.

The controversy came to light after a US intelligence whistleblower filed a complaint with an internal watchdog about Mr Trump’s conversation with the Ukrainian president.

What’s the latest on impeachment?

The House of Representatives’ Democratic leader, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, is holding a closed-door meeting with party members on Tuesday to consider impeachment.

She has so far resisted calls among her liberal rank-and-file to attempt to remove the Republican president from office as such a move lacks the support of most members of Congress and the American public.

On Monday night, the Washington Post published an op-ed by seven Democratic lawmakers – all with backgrounds in the US military and intelligence agencies – who said the “stunning” accusations against Mr Trump amounted to “a national security threat”.

“If these allegations are true, we believe these actions represent an impeachable offence,” wrote the lawmakers. “We do not arrive at this conclusion lightly.”

Nearly a dozen Democrats have come out in favour of impeachment over the last week since the Ukraine phone call controversy came to light.

More than 145 House Democrats now back such a move – more than half of the party’s 235 members in the lower chamber of Congress. The Senate, though, remains in Republican hands and is unlikely to back impeachment.

How is Biden responding?

Mr Biden will make a statement on Tuesday afternoon about the president’s “ongoing abuse of power”, his campaign said.

Speaking in Wilmington, Delaware, he will also say Congress should impeach Mr Trump if he fails to comply with requests for information on Ukraine.

The Biden team has hit back aggressively at the Ukraine allegations, denying any wrongdoing.

Mr Biden told journalists on Saturday: “Trump’s doing this because he knows I will beat him like a drum.”

He also raised his voice and jabbed his finger at a Fox News reporter, telling him: “Ask the right questions!”

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