Behind the scenes the preparations are exhaustive with one House Democratic leadership aide telling CNN that that the focus has been on everything from preparing lines of questioning and thinking through rebuttals to Republican talking points to hashing out a social media strategy that can be executed in real time.
The aide told CNN that the preparations are a "much bigger operation" and that the "coordination is on a whole other level" compared to what transpired before former special counsel Robert Mueller came to Capitol Hill to testify about his Russia investigation. There, Democrats sought to recapture momentum and change the public's perception of a report that had been out for months. This time, Democrats view the moment as more urgent.
"The momentum is behind us for this," the aide said. "The objective for Mueller was harder -- you were trying to recapture the momentum. This is an investigation we led, we obtained the information, we distilled the information."
Even during the current congressional recess for the House, rank-and-file members received daily talking points this week, an effort to help them boil down the essence of the hundreds of pages of transcripts. Even the schedule for next week has been carefully curated.
First the spotlight will be on the top diplomat in Ukraine Bill Taylor and State Department official George Kent. The leadership aide said the aim of their testimony is to paint a full picture of the events that transpired.
Taylor -- who took meticulous notes -- is seen by Democrats as an iron clad witness who came to believe through conversations with National Security Council official Tim Morrison and US Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland that "everything," as Taylor said in his opening statement, was conditioned on Ukraine announcing public investigations into Trump's political rivals. Kent is viewed by Democrats as someone who can shed light on the role the President's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani played in Ukraine.
"They tell as much of the story upfront and that was part of the objective," the leadership aide told CNN. "The first hour of a hearing and the first hearing has got to be a blockbuster."
On Friday, Marie Yovanovitch, a three-decade career diplomat who was removed from her post in the spring, will testify. She is the first political casualty of Giuliani's efforts in Ukraine, a witness Democrats hope can display the toll that the President's personal lawyer's shadow foreign policy played there.
Democrats are also carefully planning their floor agenda for the next few weeks, coordinating with the House Intelligence Committee about the schedule in an effort to ensure members aren't pulled away during critical times in the hearings.
A different Democratic aide also emphasized to CNN that the House will maintain a robust floor operation, bringing to a vote reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank, a funding bill as the federal government is set to run out of money on November 21 and a voting rights package in the next two weeks. All of this is an effort to downplay Republican talking points that Democrats are squarely focused on impeachment at the expense of everything else.
One Democratic member who has taken part in the depositions, told CNN that next week will be an opportunity for the public to see that the witnesses "are credible, apolitical, detailed, true patriots, and very specific about exactly what has transpired. The story that will be told, based on the facts, will show the President broke the law and that the set up and cover up are both far more extensive than originally thought."
Republicans meanwhile are preparing to submit their list of requested witnesses for public hearings. They have already publicly said they would like to hear from the whistleblower, something Democrats are expected to reject.
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