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Trump impeachment: White House aides can be made to testify
Don McGahn must testify in the impeachment inquiry, a judge has ruled
A federal judge has ruled that White House staff can be made to testify before Congress, rejecting the Trump administration's claims of immunity.
The ruling specifically compels former White House, counsel
Don McGahn to testify in the inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US
election.
When Congress sent him a subpoena in May, Mr. McGahn refused
to attend.
A Department of Justice spokesperson told Reuters news the agency that they would appeal against the ruling.
Mr. McGahn, who left his post in October 2018, was called to
appear before the House Judiciary Committee in May to answer questions about
the president's attempts to impede the now-concluded Mueller investigation into
Russian involvement in the 2016 presidential election.
Months later, the House Judiciary Committee was responsible
for filing articles of impeachment against Mr Trump.
The Trump administration has refused to cooperate with the
impeachment inquiry and other Democrat-led investigations, directing current
and former White House officials to defy subpoenas for testimony and documents.
But in her ruling, US District Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson
said that "no one is above the law".
"Executive branch officials are not absolutely immune
from compulsory congressional process - no matter how many times the executive
branch has asserted as much over the years - even if the president expressly
directs such officials' noncompliance," she wrote.
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Judge Jackson also explicitly said the president "does
not have the power" to stop his aides from responding to subpoenas from
Congress - adding that "presidents are not kings".
"No one, not even the head of the Executive branch, is
above the law," Judge Jackson said.
But she did say that Mr McGahn could invoke executive
privilege "where appropriate", to protect potentially sensitive
information.
Judiciary Committee chairman Jerrold Nadler said that he
expects Mr McGahn to "follow his legal obligations and promptly appear
before the Committee".
Why is Congress investigating Trump?
Monday's ruling could have an effect on who testifies during
the current impeachment hearings in Congress.
The US president is accused of withholding US military aid
to pressure Ukraine into investigating his domestic political rival.
At the heart of the impeachment inquiry is a phone call on
25 July this year between Mr Trump and Ukraine's newly elected president,
Volodymyr Zelensky.
A phone call between Presidents Trump and Zelensky is at the
centre of the impeachment inquiry
During the call, Mr Trump urged his counterpart to look into
unsubstantiated corruption claims against Democratic White House contender Joe
Biden.
Mr Trump's critics say this alleged political pressure on a
vulnerable US ally amounted to abuse of power.
What next with the impeachment inquiry?
The Judiciary Committee is expected to begin drafting
articles of impeachment - which are the charges of wrongdoing against the
president - in early December.
After a vote in the Democratic-controlled House, a trial
would be held in the Republican-run Senate.
If Mr Trump was convicted by a two-thirds majority - an
outcome deemed highly unlikely - he would become the first US president to be
removed from office through impeachment.
The White House and some Republicans want the trial to be
limited to two weeks.



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