Pelosi: Trump 'is engaged in a cover-up'

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by mvanigan
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Speaker Nancy Pelosi Nancy Patricia D'Alesandro PelosiTrump rips Dems' demands, impeachment talk: 'Witch Hunt continues!' The Hill's Morning Report - Pelosi remains firm despite new impeachment push The Memo: Trump allies see impeachment push backfiring on Democrats MORE (D-Calif.) on Wednesday accused President Trump Donald John TrumpTrump rips Dems' demands, impeachment talk: 'Witch Hunt continues!' Nevada Senate passes bill that would give Electoral College votes to winner of national popular vote The Hill's Morning Report - Pelosi remains firm despite new impeachment push MORE of being "engaged in a cover-up" following a special meeting of House Democrats focused on ongoing congressional investigations into the Trump administration.

"We do believe that it is important to follow the facts, we believe that no one is above the law, including the president of the United States, and we believe the president of the United States is engaged in a cover-up, in a cover-up," Pelosi told reporters on Capitol Hill.

Her broadside came just moments before she, Senate Minority Chuck Schumer Charles (Chuck) Ellis SchumerSchumer wants investigation into Chinese-designed New York subway cars Getting serious about infrastructure Schumer calls on McConnell to hold vote on Equality Act MORE (D-N.Y.) and other Democrats headed to the White House to meet with Trump on a possible $2 trillion infrastructure package. But the meeting quickly went off the rails after Trump learned of Pelosi’s “cover-up” remarks; the president told the Democrats he couldn’t work with them until they halted all of their "phony investigations."

"I don’t do cover-ups," Trump told reporters in the Rose Garden.

Democrats certainly won’t stop their probes into the president. But inside the closed-door Democratic meeting in the Capitol, Pelosi continued to urge caution about rushing down the path of impeachment, pointing to recent court victories in Democrats' fight to obtain testimony and documents from the Trump administration and his business entities.

A district court this week issued a ruling upholding Democrats’ subpoena ordering Trump’s accounting firm, Mazars, to hand over financial documents.

JUST IN: Speaker Pelosi says "we believe the president of the United States is engaged in a cover up" by stonewalling testimony for ongoing congressional investigations. pic.twitter.com/ncU6SegLrP — MSNBC (@MSNBC) May 22, 2019

Pelosi has been facing rising calls from members of her own party to launch impeachment proceedings to investigate potential obstruction of justice by Trump; 10 examples of possible obstruction were outlined in special counsel Robert Mueller Robert (Bob) Swan MuellerHouse progressive: Pelosi 'has it right' on impeachment Democrats talk subpoena for Mueller Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna: 'I'm not there yet' on impeachment MORE’s report.

Some House Democratic chairmen also have grown more open to impeachment as they deal with the Trump administration stonewalling their probes and issuing a near-blanket refusal to respond to congressional subpoenas.

In the closed-door meeting Wednesday, Financial Services Chairwoman Maxine Waters Maxine Moore WatersWHIP LIST: Dems who support an impeachment inquiry against President Trump Freshman Dem lawmaker argues with Ben Carson after he tries to reclaim time in hearing Democrats are running out of stunts to pull from impeachment playbook MORE (D-Calif.) continued to bang the drum for impeachment, saying Congress had a “responsibility” to uphold the Constitution and provide a check on the president.

"We need to stand up for ourselves," said Rep. Steve Cohen Stephen (Steve) Ira CohenThe Memo: Trump allies see impeachment push backfiring on Democrats Pelosi faces tipping point on Trump impeachment Democrats talk subpoena for Mueller MORE (D-Tenn.), a Judiciary Committee member who's endorsed launching an impeachment inquiry. He estimated that a half dozen Democrats spoke up in favor of impeachment in the meeting.

But many other speakers in the meeting rushed to Pelosi’s defense. Rep. Zoe Lofgren Zoe Ellen LofgrenHillicon Valley: Instagram cracks down on anti-vaccine tags | Facebook co-founder on fallout from call to break up company | House Dems reintroduce election security bill | Lawmakers offer bill requiring cyber, IT training for House House Dems reintroduce bill to protect elections from cyberattacks House Administration Committee to make election security a 'primary focus' MORE (D-Calif.), a fellow Bay Area lawmaker who serves on the Judiciary panel, told Pelosi that having a House impeachment inquiry “doesn’t change a darn thing,” according to a source in the room.

“We still have to go to court to get our subpoenas enforced. You know, we are winning those battles now,” Lofgren continued, adding that impeachment “just muddies the issue and damages us.”

As he updated members on his panel’s probes into Trump, Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler Jerrold (Jerry) Lewis NadlerDemocrats are running out of stunts to pull from impeachment playbook Trump asks if Nadler will look into Clinton's 'deleted and acid washed' emails Trump tweets conservative commentator's criticism of FBI director MORE (D-N.Y.) said the full House should immediately vote to hold Attorney General William Barr in contempt of Congress next month when lawmakers return from the Memorial Day recess, sources in the meeting said.

Barr has refused to testify before the Judiciary panel over a dispute with Nadler and Democrats who want staff attorneys to be able to question Trump's new attorney general. Nadler also insisted that Mueller's testimony before his committee needs to be public, a response to reports that Mueller and the Justice Department want some of the questioning to take place behind closed doors.

Pelosi's public remarks Wednesday marked her strongest yet on Trump following the release of Mueller's report earlier this year. Pelosi said earlier this month that she agreed with Nadler's assertion that the U.S. was facing a "constitutional crisis" after the panel voted to hold Barr in contempt of Congress after he refused to turn over Mueller's full report to lawmakers.

Pelosi has long viewed impeachment proceedings as a potential political trap heading into the 2020 election, with the potential to alienate swing voters and gin up enthusiasm among the president's base.

That view was echoed by other Pelosi allies in Wednesday’s meeting.

“I, right now, feel that we’re meeting our responsibility to defend the Constitution through the process that we’ve heard about today. I don’t in any way feel like we’re being timid, I don’t stand in front of any crowd and feel weak, but I point to all of the work that’s happening in these various Committees and I think that meets the bar that I set for defending the Constitution,” Rep. John Sarbanes John Peter Spyros SarbanesHillicon Valley: Instagram cracks down on anti-vaccine tags | Facebook co-founder on fallout from call to break up company | House Dems reintroduce election security bill | Lawmakers offer bill requiring cyber, IT training for House House Dems reintroduce bill to protect elections from cyberattacks Leader McConnell, let us vote MORE (D-Md.), a Baltimore native like Pelosi, told his colleagues in the room.

“I do worry that if we move to impeachment, it’s going to make it harder, not easier, for us to beat the President for a whole variety of different reasons,” “So, because I believe that the current process — not an impeachment inquiry — is sufficient to put the pressure on, to be strong, on the one hand, and I believe that an impeachment proceeding is not going to help us in terms of defeating the President.”

—Cristina Marcos contributed. Updated at 12:14 p.m.

CloneSix on May 22nd, 2019 at 15:44 UTC »

Trump is live on TV right now doing freeform dementia jazz about this. So much sniffing and slurring and lying. He also repeatedly refers to himself in the third person lol.

(eta) Someone reminded me this originally came from a podcast called The Daily Zeitgeist. They called his off-script rants "Trump Jazz" and I just changed it up a little bit. Credit to them.

mehereman on May 22nd, 2019 at 14:46 UTC »

Worse is he's denying what the constitution literally gives congress authority to do. He's breaking his oath of office and breaking the most fundamental laws that make up how our government works.

letdogsvote on May 22nd, 2019 at 14:29 UTC »

Huge cover up. He's trying to hide and suppress everything he's done as both a private citizen and as President.

The worst part is that the GOP Senate and all the administration heads are bending over backwards to help him.