Democrats Sunday issued new demands for Senate Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to call witnesses that the President refused to provide for the House investigation.
They seized on fresh ammunition for their case after the release of emails that show Trump's budget office ordered a freeze in security funding for Ukraine 90 minutes after Trump spoke to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on July 25.
The documents suggest a close connection between the call and Trump's pressure on Ukraine to investigate Former Vice President Joe Biden -- the core act at the center of the impeachment case.
But Republicans remain loath to criticize Trump's behavior, despite a pile of incriminating evidence. They argued instead that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi overreached in declining to send the Senate voted-out articles of impeachment charging Trump with abuse of power and obstructing Congress before she learns the shape of the trial.
Schumer goads Trump
The standoff means Trump will be left in limbo over his holiday break at his Florida resort, itching for a Senate trial that is all but certain to acquit him.
On Saturday, speaking to a crowd of conservative students, Trump falsely accused Pelosi of violating the Constitution by impeaching him.
"(Pelosi) has no case. She has no case. So let's not submit it," Trump said. "That's good right? That's good. But you know what? That's so unfair."
House Democratic leaders have not said there is no case. Instead, Pelosi held off on sending articles of impeachment to the Senate until Democrats believe they have a fair structure for the trial. The House also did not appoint impeachment managers before leaving Washington for the holiday break.
Senate Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has called for witnesses, including former national security adviser John Bolton and White House acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, to testify.
"Until we hear from the witnesses, until we get the documents, the American people will correctly assume that those blocking their testimony were aiding and abetting a cover up, plain and simple," Schumer said at a news conference on Sunday.
"President Trump, release the emails, let the witnesses testify, what are you afraid of?"
Democrats also want to hear from Mike Duffey, the political appointee in the Office of Management and Budget responsible for overseeing national security money who requested the budget freeze after Trump's call with the Ukrainian leader.
"This man should testify," Democratic presidential candidate Amy Klobuchar, who as a senator will serve as a juror in the Senate trial, said on CNN's "State of the Union."
McConnell has refused the request for witnesses, arguing that it is the House's duty to secure testimony and the Senate's job solely to try the case handed over by the other chamber. Democrats in the House declined to mount legal challenges that could last for months to secure testimony from such officials, saying that the President was a "clear and present danger" to the Constitution and national security and needed to be warned that he could not meddle in the 2020 election.
Deepening standoff
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham reflected the gulf between Pelosi and the Republican-led Senate in an appearance on Fox Business.
"She's actually trying to tell Mitch McConnell how to run the Senate. She's trampling on the separation of powers," the South Carolina Republican said.
"What she is trying to do is get Mitch McConnell to bend to her will, to shape the trial," Graham said.
Pelosi said on Thursday that she was waiting for McConnell and Schumer to cut a deal on the shape of the trial before naming her impeachment managers who will present the Democratic case in the Senate and transmitting the articles of impeachment.
Schumer and McConnell met last week but could not break the impasse. There is no sign that they will meet again with members of Congress dispersed around the nation for the holiday.
"I met with him on Thursday, we had a cordial conversation," Schumer said.
"I said, 'we need witnesses and documents, it's only fair, it's only right.' He said, 'no,' I said, 'please think about it over these holidays.' Let's hope he is."
Another of McConnell's lieutenants, Missouri Sen. Roy Blunt, told Dana Bash on "State of the Union" Sunday that he believed a deal could be struck by early next year on how to run the trial.
He advocated a compromise under which senators would vote on whether to call witnesses during the trial, using a model of the Bill Clinton impeachment trial two decades ago.
"I think that's ultimately where we wind up, where we start down this path, let both sides make their case, let the House impeachment managers make their case, let the President, for what I would argue is the first time, have a chance to make his case publicly, for his defenders to do that, and then see where we are," Blunt said.
"That's what happened with Clinton. I think that's the best way to approach this. And my guess is, that's what we do."
Such an approach, however, would force Pelosi to give up the leverage that she has by holding the articles of impeachment with no guarantee from the GOP that witnesses can be called.
An alternative solution would be for details of the trial to be set as it goes along by majority votes in the Senate.
That's one reason why Democrats are piling on pressure for witnesses since several GOP senators running for reelection in swing states may want to preserve the perception of a fair trial in order to avoid antagonizing moderate voters.
On "Fox News Sunday," Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff Marc Short slammed Pelosi's position and predicted that she would back down in the end.
"We are quite confident that this position is untenable and she is going to move it along. And that Chuck Schumer and Mitch McConnell reach a deal on how it's going to proceed in the Senate," Short said.
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