TRUMP EFFECT
Will Trump shut down the government to fight impeachment?
Analysis: Washington is bracing for the prospect that president may seek to let funding lapse in a bid to blame Democrats.
President Donald Trump speaks to the media at Naval Air Station Joint Reverse Base in Fort Worth, Texas, on Oct. 17, 2019.Andrew Harnik / AP file
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Oct. 23, 2019, 5:00 AM EDT / Updated Oct. 23, 2019, 10:21 AM EDT
By Jonathan Allen
WASHINGTON — Impeachment, meet government shutdown.
With funding for federal operations set to expire Nov. 21, the political class here is beginning to plan for the possibility — or the likelihood, in the eyes of some — that President Donald Trump will shut down the government to try to turn public opinion against House Democrats and their push to impeach him.
“He used it for his almighty wall for the longest shutdown in history, so I don’t put anything past him when it comes to this,” Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Democratic minority whip, told NBC News.
It’s not just Democrats who have learned that Trump has a tendency to add as many chips to the pile as he can in high-stakes political battles, particularly when things aren’t going his way. Right now, according to an impeachment tracker by FiveThirtyEight.com, a plurality of Americans (48.6 percent to 43.3 percent) support removing the president from office.
Trump has a history of seeking dramatic means to alter storylines.
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“The Republican leadership is watching this very closely and anything really can happen, and that does give him the ability to express himself and he has done that before,” said Ron Bonjean, a former Republican leadership aide in both the House and Senate who assisted the Trump White House with Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch’s confirmation hearings. “Could it happen again? Absolutely. And especially when everything is so personal.”
Beyond Trump’s irritation at the impeachment inquiry, many Republicans see the potential for a shutdown to flip the script on Democrats.
“The administration could use a spending showdown to put the focus back on the issues and the fact that Democrats don’t want to pay for national security, border security or restrain wasteful spending,” said one former senior administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak for the president.
“The longer Democrats drag out this impeachment circus, the less likely Trump has any reason to cooperate with them on appropriations,” the source added.
Yet Democrats contend such a move would backfire on Trump because the public would see it as an attempt to help himself at a cost to the country.
“If some Republicans want to shut down the government because the House is upholding our oath of office and holding President Trump accountable, they’ll have to defend that to the American people,” Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., chairwoman of the House Appropriations Committee, said in a statement.
On Capitol Hill, where the Senate is just taking up some of its versions of the annual appropriations bills — the dozen measures that fund the government — there is no realistic hope of the two chambers agreeing to all of them before the deadline.
A big part of the impasse has to do with the long-running fight between the White House and Congress over the president’s efforts to fund a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico, but the two chambers haven’t even yet reached a deal on how much to money to allocate for each of the dozen spending bills.
Those who want to avoid a government shutdown want to make progress on those bills while passing a measure called a “continuing resolution” that would keep the government operating beyond Nov. 21.
Count the House Democrats — who would face the politically risky prospect of moving forward with impeachment while the rest of the government sat still — in that camp.
“House Democrats refuse to play politics with a government shutdown, and we will pass necessary legislation to keep the federal government up and running,” Lowey said.
Lawmakers keep working during shutdowns, and, as is the case with federal agencies, Congress can designate certain staff as “essential” to do the same.
A senior Trump administration official said in an email that the president probably won’t shut down the government, but stopped far short of closing off that option.
“The administration expects Congress to do its job to secure the border and pay our troops, but in the event that they are unable to pass full-year appropriations bills, the president is unlikely to oppose a clean temporary funding bill,” the official, who declined to be identified, lacking authorization to speak about the issue, said in an e-mail.
Like Lowey, Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., chairman of the Appropriations Committee, doesn’t want to see a lapse in federal funding. And he doesn’t think it would be a political boon for Trump.
“I’ve said for years, and I’ve said to the president, that to shut down the government helps no one, including the administration,” he said.
As for whether he’s worried that Trump would shut down the government out of frustration with the impeachment process, Shelby stopped short of predicting that the president would avoid that route.
“I would hope not,” he said.
Jonathan Allen
Jonathan Allen is a Washington-based national political reporter for NBC News who focuses on the presidency.
Frank Thorp V contributed.
Trouble in Congress:
Chaos erupts as Republicans barge into Trump impeachment inquiry hearing
Group chanting ‘Let us in’ entered closed-door meeting where top Pentagon official who oversees Ukraine policy was to testify.
Wed 23 Oct 2019 14.38 EDT
Political tensions over an intensifying impeachment inquiryreached fever pitch on Wednesday as Republicans “stormed” a closed-door committee hearing on Capitol Hill where another witness to the Ukraine controversy was appearing – a day after devastating testimony from a key diplomat.
A group of Republican members of the House of Representatives, chanting “Let us in”, barged into a secure, in-camera hearing room where Laura Cooper, a top Pentagon official who oversees Ukraine policy, was set to testify before the committees in charge of the inquiry.
The chaos and confusion temporarily shut down the proceedings as Republicans tweeted live updates of the disruption from their cellphones, which are not typically permitted in classified areas, and reportedly entered into yelling matches with committee members.
“BREAKING: I led over 30 of my colleagues into the SCIF where Adam Schiff is holding secret impeachment depositions. Still inside – more details to come,” tweeted Matt Gaetz, a Florida Republican congressman and one of Donald Trump’s closest allies on Capitol Hill, referring to secured areas of the Capitol known as Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities, or SCIFs, and Schiff, the Democratic chairman of the House intelligence committee leading the Trump-Ukraine impeachment inquiry.
The Republicans who led the protest do not sit on the three committees involved in the impeachment inquiry and are not permitted to attend. Members of those committees already include Republican members of Congress, as well as Democratsand both parties attend and ask questions at the hearings, whether public or, as in this case, closed to the public and the press.
But the members involved in the action on Wednesday have sought to attack the inquiry on procedural grounds, protesting against the private nature of the hearings and demanding access to the full breadth of the testimony that has rattled Washington in recent weeks.
Much of the testimony that has been made public by the committee, however, and news reports confirm key elementsof a whistleblower complaint that set in motion the impeachment inquiry. The investigation centers on reports of Donald Trump withholding military aid and dangling a meeting at the White House for Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in return for favors that would benefit him in domestic US politics.
Could Donald Trump actually be impeached? – video
The invading Republicans were still in the chamber by early afternoon and ordered in pizza.
“Reporting from Adam Schiff’s secret chamber,” Republican congressman Andy Biggs began, in a series of tweets from inside the room. Biggs has accused Democrats of conducting a “Soviet-style” impeachment inquiry and demanded the testimony be made available to all lawmakers.
“When Republican members were in the SCIF, Chairman Schiff immediately left with the witness,” he tweeted.
The dramatic escalation by Republicans on Capitol Hill came after Bill Taylor, the most senior US diplomat in Kyiv, testified for hours before House investigators on Tuesday, delivering an account that was so shocking to some lawmakers, freshman Democrat congressman Andy Levin described it as “my most disturbing day in Congress so far – very troubling”.
In a lengthy opening statement, Taylor told lawmakers that Trump wanted “everything”, including military aid to Ukraine, tied to a commitment by the country’s leaders to investigate Democrats and the 2016 election as well as a company linked to the family of Trump’s leading 2020Democratic rival, Joe Biden.
“He said that President Trump wanted President Zelenskiy ‘in a public box’ by making a public statement about ordering such investigations,” Taylor said.
Trump emerged briefly on Wednesday to declare victory in enforcing what he called a “permanent” ceasefire along the northern Syrian border after his abrupt withdrawal of US troops effectively opened the door for a Turkish offensive against Kurdish-led forces in that region, leaving scores of civilians and fighters dead and hundreds of thousands of people displaced.
The president, who has denied any wrongdoing in the impeachment inquiry, spent the morning on Twitter downplaying the investigation’s findings, including Taylor’s explosive testimony. He didn’t address the impeachment issues or take any questions after delivering his statement on Syria.
Later, leaving the White House for Pittsburgh to speak at a fracking conference, Trump was unusually quiet when heading to the Marine One helicopter on the lawn.
He has become accustomed to often relatively lengthy sessions of questions and answers with reporters gathered outside, on his way to the helicopter, which has become known as “chopper talk”, but he did not take any questions on Wednesday.
Meanwhile a report emerged noting that as early as 7 May, newly elected President Zelenskiy told senior aides he was already worried about pressure from the Trump to investigate his Democratic rivals.
The group of advisers spent most of a three-hour meeting talking about how to navigate the insistence from Trump and his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, for such an investigation, and how to avoid becoming entangled in the American elections, according to three people familiar with the details of the meeting.
Among the many defenses the White House has offered is that Ukraine had not been aware that Trump was withholding military aid that Congress approved for the country unless it launched two investigations.
Associated Press contributed to this repor
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Bellaire and mutiny?
PASTOR WARNS IF TRUMP IS REMOVED FROM OFFICE, ‘GUYS THAT KNOW HOW TO FIGHT’ WILL HUNT DOWN DEMOCRATS
By Jason Lemon On 10/23/19 at 4:15 PM EDT
U.S. DONALD TRUMPUKRAINE IMPEACHMENTSENATE
Christian church leader Rick Wiles threatened that “There’s gonna be violence in America” if President Donald Trump is removed from office.
Wiles, the senior pastor at Flowing Streams Church in Florida, made the remarks on his right-wing TruNews program Tuesday evening. He claimed that cowboys, mountain men and “guys that know how to do violence” would start attacking and “hunting down” Democrats.

“If they take him [Trump] out, there’s gonna be violence in America,” the religious leader said. “That’s all there is to it,” he asserted.
“However he leaves, there’s gonna be violence in America,” Wiles went on. “I believe there are people in this country, veterans, there are cowboys, mountain men, I mean guys that know how to fight,” he said, “and they’re going to make a decision that people who did this to Donald Trump are not gonna get away with it.”
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“And they’re gonna hunt them down,” the pastor said.
“The Trump supporters are going to hunt them down,” he added. “It’s going to happen and this country is going to be plunged into darkness and they brought it upon themselves because they won’t back off.”
Wiles’ threat came as it has appeared increasingly likely that Trump will be impeached by the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives. The fast-moving impeachment inquiry, which was launched at the end of September, has already revealedthat the president pressured Ukrainian leaders to investigate his political rivals and allegedly withheld bipartisan approved military aid to the country as a “quid pro quo” to open the probes.
Although it appears likely that Trump will be impeached in the House, most analysts do not believe he will be removed from office by the Republican-controlled Senate. Although a few GOP senators have expressed serious concerns about Trump’s actions towards Ukraine, a two-thirds majority of the legislative body is required to remove the president from office. That would mean all the 45 Democrats, the body’s two independents and 19 Republicans would need to vote for Trump’s ouster.
President Donald Trump speaks during a “Keep America Great” campaign rally at American Airlines Center on October 17 in Dallas, TexasTOM PENNINGTON/GETTY
Building a wall!
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump said Wednesday that a wall is being built in Colorado.
"And we’re building a wall on the border of New Mexico. And we’re building a wall in Colorado. We’re building a beautiful wall. A big one that really works — that you can’t get over, you can’t get under,” Trump said during a speech at the Shale Insight Conference in Pittsburgh.
He continued, “And we’re building a wall in Texas. And we’re not building a wall in Kansas but they get the benefit of the walls that we just mentioned. And Louisiana’s incredible.”
Colorado is not positioned along the U.S.'s southern border, where Trump has focused his desire for a physical barrier, and there have been no reports of plans to construct a border wall in the state. A portion of the border wall is being built along the Colorado River in Arizona.
Trump presumably misspoke, as he had just been speaking about the border wall plans along the southern border between New Mexico and Mexico.
“You know why we’re going to win New Mexico? Because they want safety on their border. And they didn’t have it. And we’re building a wall on the border of New Mexico,” he declared before mentioning Colorado.
Nevertheless, Trump’s comments spread on Twitter.
Cute maneuvers
ABCNews
Trump campaign scoops up Biden’s Latino voter web address, trolls his voter outreach
By Will Steakin,Rachel Scott
Oct 23, 2019, 7:28 PM ET
WATCH: Vice President Mike Pence helped roll out the Trump campaign’s first 2020 coalition in Miami on Tuesday.
It didn’t take long for the Trump campaign to figure out how to troll Joe Biden moments after the former vice president’s campaign announced a Latino voter outreach program on Wednesday.
Biden, who spent the day campaigning across Pennsylvania and Iowa, announced “Todos Con Biden,” a “national network of Latino supporters” working to help elect the former vice president earlier on Wednesday.
But there’s one problem. The Biden campaign failed to purchase todosconbiden.com, or even lock down the @TodosConBiden Twitter handle before announcing the new effort – prompting the president’s reelection team to do what it does best: troll.
Now, the Trump campaign is using todosconbiden.com to mock the former vice president, with a landing page that says in both English and Spanish, “Oops, Joe forgot about Latinos.” The page also links out to the president’s own Latino outreach coalition “Latinos for Trump.” And the @TodosConBiden Twitter account, in the possession of the Trump campaign, has already begun posting unflattering counter messaging targeting Biden.
The reelection team told ABC News they bought the URL for a “minimal cost” after the Trump campaign’s coalition team noticed the URL for the new effort was still up for grabs.
“The Biden campaign continues to be inept with a deeply flawed candidate,” Deputy Communications Director Erin Perrine told ABC News. "Latinos are thriving under President Trump and now thanks to the Biden camp, people can find out more about that success at todosconbiden.com.
The landing page for the Donald J. Trump for President campaign. The Trump campaign said they bought the URL for the Biden campaign’s newly announced Latino voter outreach effort “Todos Con Biden.”
In response, the Biden campaign said the move by the Trump campaign was “no surprise.”
“It is no surprise that Trump’s Campaign would resort to childish antics like this to take attention away from this President’s appalling record of separating families and using immigrants as scapegoats, fomenting hatred and white supremacy, and trying to take away health care from millions of Americans who need it,” according to Isabel Aldunate, deputy director of strategic communications/Hispanic media press secretary for the Biden campaign.
Scooping up the URL and Twitter handle to mock Biden is just the latest example of the Trump campaign’s trolling strategy, which has in part fueled and embodied the reelection effort so far. During the last two Democratic primary debates in Ohio and Houston, the campaign paid thousands of dollars to fly a massive banner above the host cities slamming the president’s potential rivals.
The campaign has also turned mockery into cash, selling everything from “Pencil-Neck Adam Schiff” T-Shirts to most recently “Where’s Hunter?” shirts, which went on sale less than an hour after the president asked about the former vice president’s son at a Minneapolis rally.
And it’s not just the Trump campaign who sees a gaffe like this as a broader issue for Biden, who himself has been prone to missteps over his decades-long career.
“How the hell are you Joe Biden’s campaign and you don’t lock up the URL before you announce stuff?” Mike Madrid, a veteran Republican political consultant who’s a vocal critic of the president told ABC News.
On top of trolling Biden, the Trump campaign is using this opportunity to tout the president’s record with Latino Americans, such as record low unemployment. But critics, including Madrid, argue economic issues alone won’t be enough to sway large numbers of voters given Trump’s record on immigration.
“Anybody who believes that economic numbers are going to motivate Latinos to shift allegiances – that’s an absurd notion,” Madrid said.
However, the longtime political operative added that if Democrats are going to beat Trump in 2020 it will require a far more efficient operation than the campaign Hillary Clinton ran in 2016, and Wednesday’s Biden blunder doesn’t instill faith that the 76-year-old former vice president is the best option.
“Can the Democratic nominee get higher Latino voter turnout than the disastrous operation by Hillary Clinton? This tells me that Biden and his campaign are not looking really strong in that regard,” Madrid said. “That’s what concerns me.”
The Biden campaign launched “Todos con Biden” with the goal of growing grassroots support while also promising immigration and education reform for the Latino community.
"Joe Biden knows that our diversity is our strength, and as president, he will continue to ensure that all Americans are treated with dignity – not scapegoated or used to score political points, " Laura Jiménez, the campaign’s national Latino vote director said.
It comes months after the Trump campaign rolled out its own “Latinos for Trump” coalition in June, an effort aimed at turning out Latino voters.
In the 2016 election, Trump took 29% of the Latino vote, topping Romney, who took 27% of the Latino vote in 2012. Hispanics are projected to become the largest minority group in the electorate in 2020, with 18.3%, surpassing African Americans.
ABC News’ Molly Nagle and Johnny Verhovek contributed to this report.
© 2019 ABC News Internet Ventures. All rights reserved.
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Impeachment proceedings-some opinions behind doors :
EDITORIAL
The far-reaching implications of Trump’s betrayal
Updated October 24, 2019, 3:00 a.m.

Ambassador William Taylor is escorted by US Capitol Police as he arrives to testify before House committees as part of the impeachment investigation of President Donald Trump, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday. (J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP PHOTO)
When he took the job as president, Donald Trump swore an oath to faithfully execute the responsibilities of the office. One of those tasks, passed into law with overwhelming bipartisan support, was to provide almost $400 million in military aid this year to Ukraine to help the Eastern European country resist Russian aggression. The war there has claimed 13,000 lives, and American aid is critical to Ukraine’s — and Europe’s — defense. Trump’s responsibility — his sworn duty — was to deliver that aid to Kyiv.
To use the money instead for his own personal purposes would be a breathtaking abuse of presidential power, and a betrayal of national security. And yet, with each passing day, there’s more evidence that Trump did just that. The latest evidence came in explosive testimony from a US diplomatwho told Congress Tuesday that the president held up the military aid as part of a pressure campaign to get the Ukrainian government to assist Trump’s 2020 reelection campaign.
If Congress lets this abuse of power pass, they’re creating an alarming precedent for this and all future presidents: Go ahead and use taxpayer money to help yourself, even when the funds were earmarked to support an important American national security goal. The consequences would be long-lasting: A superpower like the United States cannot allow its foreign policy to be subordinated to the president’s personal needs and expect to maintain any international support or respect.
It was appalling enough that Trump had asked for political favors from Ukraine, and it was that request for Kyiv to meddle in a US election that triggered the House’s impeachment inquiry. The fact that the president seems to have used congressionally approved military aid for leverage makes the abuse of power that much graver. He sought to make Ukraine choose between participating in a corrupt scheme or losing American aid in the face of an existential threat.
The new information came from the current US envoy to Ukraine, William B. Taylor, who testified that Trump had held up the aid to Ukraine not for any legitimate reasons, as the White House has tried to argue, but to compel the country to help his reelection campaign. Specifically, he wanted Ukraine to launch two phony “investigations,” both of which would be politically beneficial for the president in defending himself and attacking a prospective rival. He wanted Ukraine to investigate a preposterous theory that that country, not Russia, had interfered in the 2016 election, and to launch a probe into potential Democratic nominee Joe Biden and his son Hunter. The mere existence of those investigations, if Ukraine had opened them and announced them publicly, as Trump wanted, would help his campaign.
The testimony from Taylor buttresses the public admission of acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, who acknowledged last week that Trump had held up the aid money in part to pressure Ukraine. Mulvaney backtracked, and the administration has been trying to retroactively invent legitimate-sounding reasons for the holdup, but Taylor’s account is said to be backed up by contemporaneous notes he took at the time.
Taylor — along with the other officials who have testified — deserves the public’s gratitude for ignoring the White House’s efforts to prevent him from appearing. Unlike the president, he has put duty and the national interest first. Officials who have participated in the stonewalling, like Energy Secretary Rick Perry and Defense Secretary Mark Esper, are putting a permanent blot on their reputations.
Taylor’s testimony strengthened the case for impeachment but also injected a dose of foreign-policy realism about the wider consequences of the scandal. The president’s misconduct is not some kind of minor lapse. By holding up the aid, Trump put in doubt American commitment to its own foreign policy priorities. And he sent the message to the world that American support is for sale, undercutting decades of diplomacy based on supporting shared democratic values. In the world’s eyes, every US foreign policy decision is now tainted by the knowledge that the president makes major decisions based on what’s in it for him, and that the safeguards in the American political system meant to prevent just that kind of abuse have failed because of the spinelessness of congressional Republicans.
Or at least, they have so far. Some of the damage is already done. But if members of Congress of all parties want to defend both their own power and the integrity of American foreign policy, impeachment is the proper constitutional remedy.
EDITORIAL
The far-reaching implications of Trump’s betrayal
President Trump’s misconduct is not some kind of minor lapse.
MICHAEL A. COHEN
©2019 Boston Globe Media Partners, LLC
Republican counterpunches --------
Democracy Dies in Darkness
Live updates: Graham to introduce resolution condemning House impeachment inquiry
By John Wagner and Felicia Sonmez
October 24, 2019 at 12:27 PM EDT
Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) advertised a news conference Thursday to announce a resolution condemning the House impeachment inquiry, as partisan rancor continued to escalate over the Ukraine scandal.
Lindsey Graham Introducing Resolution to Permanently Attach Lips to Trump’s Ass
BESS LEVIN
OCTOBER 24, 2019 12:17 PM
Lindsey Graham listens to Donald Trump make an announcement regarding the “First Step Act”, prison reform bill, in the Roosevelt Room at the White House on November 14, 2018 in Washington, DC.
By Mark Wilson/Getty Images.
Lindsey Graham is hopping mad and he’s pretty sure you know why. Despite the South Carolina senator’s insistence that Donald Trump did nothing wrong when it comes to Ukraine, and that it’s “very appropriate” for the president of the United States to try to extort another country, House Democrats just had to go ahead and open their impeachment inquiry. Even though Trump, who admitted to withholding aid to Ukraine until it investigated his political rival, is quite obviously innocent. Even though, as God is his witness, Graham will testify Trump doesn’t have a corrupt bone in his body, and would never do any of the things his acting chief of staff has already confessed to on live television. Even though Nancy Pelosi can quite obviously see it’s tearing Graham up inside.
And that got Lindsey thinking: Sure, he can wag his finger at Democrats and tell them they should be ashamed of themselves, that their mamas raised them better than this, and that they should be sent to bed without any shrimp and grits, but serious times call for serious measures. And that is why, on Thursday afternoon, he will introduce a resolution that not only formally denounces the House’s impeachment inquiry, but makes it clear to any presidents listening that he is willing to go down with the ship. Speaking about his plan on Fox News, Graham told Sean Hannity, “This resolution puts the Senate on record condemning the House…. Here’s the point of the resolution: Any impeachment vote based on this process, to me, is illegitimate, is unconstitutional, and should be dismissed in the Senate without a trial.”
Of course, nowhere in the Constitution does it say that the House must hold a vote before opening an impeachment inquiry, nor does anyone believe that Republicans would suddenly be totally cool with the proceedings should one be held, but never mind you that. Graham is also apparently upset that the president has not been allowed to confront the whistle-blower, whose identity is protected by federal law. “We cannot allow future presidents and this president to be impeached based on an inquiry in the House that’s never been voted upon, that does not allow the president to confront the witnesses against him, to call witnesses on his behalf, and cross-examine people who are accusing him of misdeeds,” he said.
Graham, whose devotion to Trump runs so deep that he’s willing to overlook all the times the president has slandered his dead friend, announced the resolution after saying earlier this month that he would be sending a letter to Pelosi telling her that Senate Republicans have no intention of removing Trump from office over a friendly phone call with the president of Ukraine. And even though Graham is sticking his neck out for the president he loves, for some people, it’s apparently not enough. According to Jonathan Swan, “a source close to” Donald Trump Jr. doesn’t think a resolution is enough. “If you’re going to talk the talk on Fox, you better walk the walk in the chamber,” this person said. “And a resolution is just talk. People expect action.”
It’s not clear what kind of action Don Jr.’s inner circle would like Graham to take, or what would constitute walking the walk, though there is presumably a nonzero chance Graham will use his 3 p.m. press conference to chain himself to the doors of Pelosi‘s office and refuse to get out of the way until the House agrees to clear Trump on all charges and pass a law declaring him president for life.
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Related
Sen. Lindsey Graham questions U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director L. Francis Cissna during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing June 19, 2018 in Washington, DC.
IMPEACHMENT
Lindsey Graham: “Very Appropriate” for Trump to Try to Extort Another Country
LEVIN REPORT
Lindsey Graham: Trump Will “Blow You Away” With His Innocence on Ukraine
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