US official denies knowing Ukraine aid linked to Biden probe
President Donald Trump responded Wednesday to
a key witness in the House impeachment inquiry who claimed that Rudy Giuliani
had been directed by the president to pursue a “quid pro quo.”
U.S. Ambassador Gordon Sondland told the panel
leading the proceedings that Giuliani was expressing Trump’s desires when he
“demanded” Ukraine announce investigations involving Trump’s personal
political rivals.
Trump seized on Sondland’s recollection of a
phone call the two men had in September, when Sondland asked the president
directly about his plans for Ukraine.
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President Trump responds to a key witness in
the House impeachment inquiry who claimed that Rudy Giuliani had been
directed by the president to pursue a “quid pro quo.”
·
Trump says he told U.S. Ambassador Gordon
Sondland in a phone call: “I want nothing. I want nothing. I want no quid pro
quo. Tell [Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy] to do the right thing.”
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Trump also says of Sondland that “I don’t know
him very well. I have not spoken to him much,” but he “seems like a nice guy,
though.”
Trump, reading off a pad of paper with notes
jotted in black marker, said he told Sondland on the call: “I want nothing. I
want nothing. I want no quid pro quo.
Trump suggested Sondland’s testimony
exonerates him. “I would say that means it’s all over,” Trump told reporters.
White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham
said in a statement that “Ambassador Sondland’s testimony made clear that in
one of the few brief phone calls he had with President Trump, the President
clearly stated that he ‘wanted nothing’ from Ukraine and repeated ‘no quid
pro quo over and over again.”
But Trump has previously said — on television
— that he wants Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and
his son Hunter.
“If they were honest about it, they would
start a major investigation into the Bidens,” Trump said when asked what he
wanted Zelenskiy to do about the former veep — now a 2020 Democratic
presidential primary candidate — and his son.
Sondland was the most-anticipated witness to
appear for a public hearing in the impeachment inquiry. Sondland had direct
contact with the president and had previously discussed the investigations
with him, according to testimony from previous witnesses.
But Trump said of Sondland that “I don’t know
him very well. I have not spoken to him much” but he “seems like a nice guy,
though.”
Trump also chided the reporters listening to
him. “Ready? Have the cameras rolling?” he asked before reading his notes to
the throng of journalists. “If you weren’t fake news, you’d cover it
properly,” Trump said at another point.
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