At the heart of Donald Trump’s legal defense in his impeachment trial is a straightforward claim: the president did not withhold military aid to Ukraine in order to coerce officials in Kyiv into targeting his domestic rivals. Former White House National Security Advisor John Bolton appears to have a first-hand account that exposes the defense as a lie.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who’s leading the House impeachment effort, said this morning that the news has left senators in a difficult position. “They’ve just learned there’s a key witness going to the heart of the allegations,” the impeachment manager told CNN. “The question they have to answer is: Do they want to hear the truth? … I think all the senators are now really hard-pressed to turn him away.”
A handful of Senate Republicans appear to be thinking along these lines.
A pair of moderate Republican senators said Monday that the major revelations from a soon-to-be released book from former national security adviser John Bolton have strengthened the case for calling witnesses in President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial.
Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said it’s “increasingly likely” there will be enough Republican senators to vote in favor of calling witnesses in the president’s ongoing trial…. Another moderate Republican senator, Susan Collins of Maine, tweeted out a statement saying the “reports about John Bolton’s book strengthen the case for witnesses and have prompted a number of conversations among my colleagues.”
In all likelihood, it would only take four GOP senators to break party ranks and bring Bolton to the Senate to testify. There now appears to be two Republicans on board, which means the search is on for two more.
It’s worth noting for context that as the first week of the Senate trial came to a close, the conventional wisdom was that the fight over possible witnesses was moving in a direction the White House liked. By most accounts, the votes for new testimony simply weren’t there and Democratic demands were likely to be ignored by the chamber’s GOP majority.
The news about Bolton appears to have maybe — maybe — changed the direction of the prevailing winds. A senior Republican official told the Washington Post overnight that the odds of depositions for new testimony are “certainly rising dramatically.”
That said, they’re far from 100%.









