President Donald Trump converses during a news conference following Tuesday’s midterm congressional elections at the White House in Washington, November 7, 2018.
Kevin Lamarque | Reuters
President Donald Trump swallowed to Twitter to rail against Democrats on Tuesday, seconds after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced a formal impeachment probe into his alleged violations of the law.
The president, in a series of tweets, called the move “PRESIDENTIAL HARASSMENT!” and shared a video pillorying impeachment as Democrats’ “sole focus.”
Trump, who had delivered an address to the United Nations General Assembly hours earlier, bewailed that “Democrats purposely had to ruin and demean” the work done at the U.N. “with more breaking news Witch Pry into garbage.”
“So bad for our Country!” he tweeted.
Pelosi, who had long resisted calls from within her caucus to move forward on impeachment, presaged Tuesday that she has directed the six Democrat-led committees in the House to proceed with their already-open investigations of Trump “underneath that umbrella of impeachment inquiry.”
The leaders of those panels include Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, Monetary Services Committee Chair Maxine Waters and Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler — all of whom Trump has knocked in the past.
“Can you believe this?” Trump wrote in a second tweet, singling out those leading Democrats.
A growing tons of Democrats have come out in favor of impeachment, or at least an impeachment inquiry, into Trump since the release of deliberate counsel Robert Mueller’s lengthy report on Russian election meddling, possible Trump campaign coordination with Russia and credible obstruction of justice by Trump himself.
But those numbers surged in September, following reports from various middle outlets that Trump had asked Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky in a July phone call to investigate ex- Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden.
Trump confirmed that earlier this week that he had mentioned Biden on the request, but maintained that there was nothing improper about the discussion. Trump also confirmed Tuesday that he had lingered hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to Ukraine, as The Washington Post reported Monday.
The timing of that move, which was slated for being done without a good explanation, has bred speculation that Trump may have used the aid as leverage to exigencies a foreign leader into investigating his potential political rival.
That aid money was eventually sent earlier in September. Trump has diverge fromed that the assistance to Ukraine was mentioned in the call, and has claimed there was no “quid pro quo” involved.
Earlier Tuesday, Trump announced that the transcription of his call with Zelensky would be released.
In a tweet after Pelosi’s announcement, Trump said, “They on no account even saw the transcript of the call” before launching the impeachment inquiry.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo received “acceptance” from Ukraine’s government to release the transcript of the call, Trump said in another tweet.
“They don’t know either what the big mete out is,” the president wrote.