The recent impeachment of Donald Trump ushered in a new phase of the president’s scandal, but it did not mark the end of revelations about what transpired when the administration took steps to extort a vulnerable ally for domestic political gain. The New York Times published a report earlier this week that jolted the broader debate, highlighting new details about concerns within the White House regarding Trump’s directive to withhold military aid to Ukraine.
Opposition to the order from his top national security advisers was more intense than previously known. In late August, Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper joined Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and John R. Bolton, the national security adviser at the time, for a previously undisclosed Oval Office meeting with the president where they tried but failed to convince him that releasing the aid was in interests of the United States.
By late summer, top lawyers at the Office of Management and Budget who had spoken to lawyers at the White House and the Justice Department in the weeks beforehand, were developing an argument — not previously divulged publicly — that Mr. Trump’s role as commander in chief would simply allow him to override Congress on the issue.
And [acting White House Chief of Staff Mick] Mulvaney is shown to have been deeply involved as a key conduit for transmitting Mr. Trump’s demands for the freeze across the administration.
These are no small details. The Times‘ report, which has not been independently verified by MSNBC or NBC News, paints an exceedingly damning portrait of a White House operation that began hatching Trump’s Ukraine scheme as early as June, with Mulvaney emailing an aide, Robert Blair, asking “whether we can hold [military aid] back” from Ukraine, despite congressional approval.
In the months that followed, top members of Team Trump directly urged the president to follow a more responsible course, only to find Trump ignoring their pleas. It led some in the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to make absurd assertions about the sweeping powers of presidential whims.
The article specifically referenced a pointed email from Elaine McCusker, the Pentagon’s top budget official, to Michael Duffey, a political appointee at OMB who was directly involved in executing Trump’s scheme. “You can’t be serious,” McCusker wrote on Sept. 10, after learning of Trump’s plan. “I am speechless.”
There’s no shortage of relevant angles to the Times‘ report, but there’s one overarching element that poses new challenges for Republicans: the revelations come against a backdrop in which lawmakers are debating whether to include key witnesses in the Senate’s impeachment trial.
Remember, when Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) reached out to the Republican leadership recently about the importance of witness testimony at Trump’s trial, the New York Democrat pointed to four individuals — Bolton, Mulvaney, Duffey, and Blair — who could shed light on the White House’s Ukraine extortion scheme. The latest reporting reinforces an obvious truth: these officials have unique and important information about the president’s actions.
To say that senators shouldn’t hear from these first-hand witnesses is to effectively endorse a cover-up. Either the “jurors” in Trump’s impeachment trial will get the whole truth or they won’t, but it’s now far more difficult to mount a credible defense in support of willful ignorance.
Indeed, for those inclined to believe the president’s claims of innocence, the Times’ article points to a series of powerful officials who could, at any time, provide testimony that sheds important light on the pressing controversy. If Trump did nothing wrong, wouldn’t the president and his allies want the world to hear exactly what they have to say?
In a press conference earlier this week, Schumer told reporters that the witnesses Senate Democrats requested were “intimately involved and had direct knowledge of President Trump’s decision to cut off aid and benefit himself,” adding, “Simply put, in our fight to have key documents and witnesses in the Senate impeachment trial, these new revelations are a game changer.”









