Impeachment trial moves into questions phase

The impeachment trial of President Donald Trump moved into the questions phase on Wednesday with senators starting 16 hours of questions over two days to the House of Representatives managers and the president's legal team.
Outside the chamber, Republicans and Trump sought to defeat a Democratic-led effort to allow witnesses and documents.
Trump on Wednesday accused his former national security adviser, John Bolton, of making false allegations and cast him as a warmonger. Trump urged Republicans to reject calling witnesses in the Senate.
Democrats are pressing to get the Senate to hear from Bolton, who reportedly claims in a coming book that Trump told him in August to keep aid to Ukraine frozen until the country helped with investigations into Democratic rival Joe Biden and his son Hunter.
The crux of the case for Trump's impeachment is the allegation that he withheld military aid and a White House meeting with the Ukrainian president to pressure Ukraine to investigate the Bidens. Hunter Biden served on the board of Burisma, a Ukrainian energy company, while his father was US vice-president.
Trump on Wednesday called Bolton's yet unpublished book "nasty& untrue" and accused him of including classified national security information. "Who would do this?" Trump tweeted.
Trump said that if he had listened to Bolton when he was national-security adviser, "we would be in World War Six by now".
The president's motivation for freezing aid to Ukraine is at the heart of the impeachment case. Trump has said he did nothing wrong and has called the impeachment a politically driven hoax.
Senators sent their questions in writing to Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, who is presiding over the trial, and he then read them, identifying who was asking the question. On Tuesday, he had asked the senators to limit their answers to five minutes.
The first question came from three Republican senators considered the most likely to vote for witnesses: Mitt Romney of Utah, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine.
Democrats need at least four Republicans to side with them to win a vote this week to get testimony from witnesses.
The three asked the president's defense team how the Senate should consider more than one potential motivation for Trump withholding aid from Ukraine.
White House Deputy Counsel Pat Philbin answered by saying that in a situation where there are mixed motives, some personal and some in the public interest, the act isn't impeachable.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York then asked Democrat managers if there could be a fair trial without calling Bolton.
The lead Democratic manager, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff of California, responded: "The short answer to that question is no", and told lawmakers to not wait for the book.

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