"If he has a defense, we
on House Judiciary—along with the American people—are eager to hear it,"
said. Rep. Pramila Jayapal.
Monday, December 02, 2019
White House counsel Pat
Cipollone informed the House Judiciary Committee late Sunday that President
Donald Trump and his lawyers will not participate in the panel's first
impeachment hearing this week, a move Democratic lawmakers highlighted as
further evidence that the president's repeated
complaints about lack of due process have been completely empty.
"Not one process
complaint made by the president and his Republican allies in Congress so far
has turned out to be genuine," tweeted Rep.
Don Beyer (D-Va.).
In a letter (pdf)
to Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee,
Cipollone described the impeachment proceedings as unfair and said the
president will not take part in the scheduled Wednesday hearing, which
will feature
a panel of constitutional scholars and law professors.
"Under the current
circumstances, we do not intend to participate in your Wednesday hearing,"
Cipollone wrote to Nadler. "It is too late to cure the profound procedural
deficiencies that have tainted this entire inquiry. We cannot fairly be
expected to participate in a hearing while the witnesses are yet to be named
and while it remains unclear whether the Judiciary Committee will afford the
president a fair process through additional hearings."
Cipollone's letter comes less
than a week after Nadler formally
invited Trump and his attorneys to attend and participate in the
December 4 hearing.
"The committee's
impeachment inquiry rules allow for the president to attend the hearing and for
his counsel to question the witness panel," Nadler said in a statement
last Tuesday. "At base, the president has a choice to make: he can take
this opportunity to be represented in the impeachment hearings, or he can stop
complaining about the process."
Trump and his GOP allies in
Congress have repeatedly decried the House impeachment proceedings as a
"sham," even as Republicans have been allowed to participate in
hearings and question witnesses both behind closed doors and in public.
In October, the president
called the impeachment inquiry a "lynching," sparking
widespread outrage.
"We're bending over
backward to be fair," Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), a member of the
House Judiciary Committee, tweeted Sunday.
"The onus is on President Trump to, for once, behave and engage with
Congress. If he has a defense, we on House Judiciary—along with the American
people—are eager to hear it."