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Democrats escalate impeachment bid in end-of-year dash

The rising stakes come as Republicans Sunday launched a new offensive to destroy the legitimacy of the Democratic process by claiming that Trump’s enemies are rushing the somber business of making him the third impeached President in order to dodge a voter backlash.

Democratic leaders built a strong case in two weeks of televised witness hearings before the Thanksgiving break that Trump abused his power by attempting to coerce Ukraine to intervene in the 2020 election.

But their efforts have not shifted the nation’s tribal political divisions in a way that could seriously threaten Trump’s presidency and cause Republicans to desert him in the Senate trial expected early next year.

The action now moves from Rep. Adam Schiff’s House Intelligence Committee, expected to vote to release the report of its investigation on Tuesday, to the House Judiciary Committee.

Rep. Jerry Nadler’s panel will draw up articles of impeachment — effectively the charges on which Trump would be tried in the Senate — ahead of a full House vote expected before Christmas.

The committee will begin its business on Wednesday with an examination of the Constitutional grounds for impeachment for which Nadler is yet to release a witness list. But the chairman offered Trump and his lawyers a chance to join Judiciary Committee proceedings, presenting them with a new tactical conundrum.

On Sunday evening, White House counsel Pat Cipollone told Nadler that the President and his lawyers would skip the hearing on Wednesday, and would respond later to a Friday deadline about participation in future hearings.

“We cannot fairly be expected to participate in a hearing while the witnesses are yet to be named and while it remains unclear whether the Judiciary Committee will afford the President a fair process through additional hearings,” Cipollone said.

Democratic leaders have already said that Trump’s withholding of nearly $400 million in military aid to Ukraine allegedly in an attempt to force an investigation of a domestic political opponent — Joe Biden — could satisfy the offense of bribery included in the constitutional conditions for impeachment.

And the President’s refusal to provide key evidence and senior officials for testimony to the investigation could be folded into a separate article of impeachment on obstruction.

Democrats are moving ahead without hearing from central witnesses including Trump’s attorney Rudy Giuliani who led his off-the-books diplomatic effort in Ukraine and former national security advisor John Bolton.

The legal challenges likely to be required to force such testimony could drag on for months and frustrate House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s desire to shield her lawmakers in election year 2020 by swiftly wrapping the impeachment process. And Democrats also say they already have sufficient evidence to impeach the President.

Minds made up

Raising the curtain for critical weeks in the political duel over the Trump presidency, Democrats Sunday argued that the case against the commander-in-chief already merited impeachment.

And Republicans intensified their complaints about the fairness of the process and fanned Trump’s disinformation campaign in a way that reflects their challenge in countering the facts of a case that became even more damning just before Thanksgiving.

In the latest blow to Trump’s claims of innocence,
The New York Times reported last week that Trump released the hold on aid to Ukraine after he was briefed on a whistleblower’s report raising the alarm at his pressure on the former Soviet state.

Republicans previously argued that there was no quid pro quo because Ukraine eventually got the money. But the Times report raises the possibility that the congressionally mandated taxpayer payment was only freed up after Trump got found out.

Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who is running for president, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday that
she had all but made up her mind over Trump’s fate.

“I’m someone that wants to look at every single count,” Klobuchar said, but added: “I have made very clear I think this is impeachable conduct.”

California Democratic Rep. Zoe Lofgren,
the only lawmaker to have worked on all three modern impeachments, said Trump’s transgressions were worse than those that led to President Richard Nixon’s resignation.
Only lawmaker to have worked 3 impeachment probes says Trump's Ukraine conduct 'more serious' than Nixon's WatergateOnly lawmaker to have worked 3 impeachment probes says Trump's Ukraine conduct 'more serious' than Nixon's Watergate

“If you take a look at … what the founding fathers were concerned about, it was the interference by foreign governments in our political system that was one of their gravest concerns,” Lofgren, who sits on the House Judiciary Committee said.

“Nixon’s behavior didn’t fall into that range. So, in that way, this conduct is more serious,” Lofgren told CNN’s Dana Bash.

But Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy complained that the Democratic push for impeachment had been unfair from the start.

“Rounds one and two by Speaker Pelosi and Chairman Schiff are as rigged as a carnival ring toss,” Kennedy said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” in an appearance in which he again appeared to draw equivalences between Russian and Ukrainian election meddling.

Republicans have alleged that Ukraine interfered in 2016 to give a pretext for Trump’s claim he withheld aid because he wanted to investigate political corruption in Kiev.

Georgia Rep. Doug Collins, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, slammed Nadler’s “made for TV event.”

He complained that Republicans were not being given sufficient time to draw up witness lists given that the Intelligence committee would not vote on the Schiff report until Tuesday.

He said he didn’t know if the White House would participate, but suggested Republicans want to call Schiff himself as a witness – a step likely to be resisted by majority Democrats.

“It’s an internal kind of time frame to try and finish this out by the end of the year because they want to get at this President right now before … everybody completely sees through the process sham of the elections for next year. So we’re rushing this,” Collins said on “Fox News Sunday.”

New tactical dilemma for the White House

Nadler’s invitation to Trump to participate in his future hearings raises a dilemma for the White House — especially after the President last week blasted Democrats as being “deranged” and “maniacs” for pursuing an impeachment probe.

By refusing to take part, Trump’s team would be weakening their own arguments that Democrats are shutting them out of the process. But joining in would offer legitimacy to an investigation the President has dismissed as a sham and a hoax.

Nadler may be effectively laying a trap. If Trump’s lawyers were to argue that his conduct does not reach the bar of impeachment they would implicitly be accepting that the President committed some kind of misconduct.

How the last chief justice handled an impeachment trial of the President of the United StatesHow the last chief justice handled an impeachment trial of the President of the United States

Trump has warned Republicans not to make such arguments, insisting his conduct — including a call with Ukraine’s president that shows him asking for a “favor” and a probe into Joe Biden and his son Hunter is “perfect.”

Trump’s position increases political pressure on some Republican senators who are vulnerable in reelection races who might consider criticizing the President to give them political cover for a vote to acquit him.

One Republican Judiciary Committee member, California Rep. Tom McClintock, said it would be to the President’s “advantage” to take part in the panel’s proceedings. But he warned Trump had to weigh “enormous catastrophic damage” that could be done to the concept of executive privilege such a step might entail.

A White House official last week cast doubt on the sincerity of Nadler’s offer, pointing out that Trump will be in London for the NATO summit during Wednesday’s hearing.

Such debate highlights the challenge facing Nadler, a long-time antagonist of his fellow New Yorker Trump, as his committee takes the lead in driving the impeachment narrative.

Nadler’s oversight efforts have so far been less successful in shaping a punchy, damaging case against the administration than Schiff’s public hearings which were disciplined and powerful and managed to largely neuter GOP efforts to disrupt them.

Can Democrats change the political game?

The coming weeks may offer the last best chance for Democrats to significantly alter the political temperature in the nation towards impeachment.

No, the new CNN poll is not good news for Donald Trump on impeachmentNo, the new CNN poll is not good news for Donald Trump on impeachment
Although 50% of respondents approve of impeaching and removing Trump
according to CNN polling, two weeks of televised hearings did not significantly change the equation.

The situation reflects the fact that perceptions of Trump’s behavior generally follow partisan lines in a nation deeply polarized by his presidency. It also suggests that while Trump’s apparent willingness to use his constitutional authority to pursue his own interests at the expense of the nation’s appears to be an abuse of power, Ukraine is an issue that is remote for many Americans more concerned with considerations driving the 2020 election, including health care, education and the economy.

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Its not the first time winter storms have ruined Thanksgiving travel. Here are 5 others

History provides a few examples of holiday storms that left wintry chaos in their wake.

Here are five notable storms, starting with the Great Appalachian Storm in 1950 through the Thanksgiving Day storm that hit New York just 5 years ago.

The storm is considered one of the worst wind events ever recorded. Winds gusted up to 160 mph on Mount Washington, New Hampshire, and it was the costliest storm up until that time,
according to the National Weather Service.

160 people died in the storm by the time it was over.

November 24-25, 1971: Thanksgiving Snowstorm

Albany, New York, took a major punch on Thanksgiving 1971. The area accumulated 22.5 inches of snow — the greatest November snowfall on record. Up to 30 inches of snow was reported in the Catskills and across the Upper Hudson Valley,
according to the NWS.

Roads were not plowed until the next day, causing chaos for transportation.

November 26-27, 1983, The Great Thanksgiving Weekend Blizzard

Denver was thrown off by a major storm that rolled in during Thanksgiving 1989.  Denver was thrown off by a major storm that rolled in during Thanksgiving 1989.

This infamous snowstorm covered Denver in more than 20 inches of snow in just 37 hours,
according to the NWS. Wind speeds reached up to 36 mph and temperatures fell into the teens and low 20’s across the area.

All of the roads in and around Denver were closed, and Stapleton International Airport, the airport at the time, was shut down for 24 hours.

But Coloradans didn’t get rid of the snow until 63 days later — the longest stretch of continuous snow cover in Denver’s history.

November 23, 1989: Thanksgiving Day Storm

This white Thanksgiving storm produced up to nine inches of snow over Long Island, New York and up to 14 inches in Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

It started in the Carolinas and then blanketed the Mid-Atlantic Coast and New England in heavy snow,
according to the Old Farmer’s Almanac.

November 26-27, 2014: Thanksgiving Day Storm

Motorists brave the falling snow as they head south on Interstate 81 near Staunton, Virginia, on November 26, 2014. Motorists brave the falling snow as they head south on Interstate 81 near Staunton, Virginia, on November 26, 2014.

A nor’easter was the culprit of this Thanksgiving storm in 2014. In Albany, New York, 10.4 inches of snow fell making it one of the greatest November snowstorms on record for that area,
according to the NWS.
Nearly 310,000 customers lost power between New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont. It took nearly a week to restore it. The storm created New Hampshire’s fourth greatest power outage in history,
according to the NWS.
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weather forecast travel 2019 – CNN

Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images
Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

In what is shaping up to be a historically busy travel day in the US, airlines will see an anticipated 3.1 million passengers today, according to Airlines for America, an airline trade organization.

A record 31.6 million passengers were forecast to travel on US airlines during the Thanksgiving holiday period, up 3.7% from last year.

By mid-morning, 1,300 flights into or out of the United States had been delayed and almost 700 had been canceled, according to FlightAware.com. Travel impacts are expected to last through Monday, the weather service said.

Delta Airlines announced weather waivers for 16 cities in the Upper Midwest on Saturday, and 22 cities in the Northeast for Sunday and Monday, including airports in Boston and the New York area.

American Airlines issued waivers for passengers traveling Sunday and Monday on flights to and from New York’s John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia airports as well as Newark and the airline’s hub in Philadelphia. Other cities in the American Airlines announcement include Boston, Buffalo, Pittsburgh and Toronto, Canada.

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Both London Bridge stabbing victims named as University of Cambridge graduates

Saskia Jones, 23, and Jack Merritt, 25, were both involved with Learning Together, a network of academics and criminal justice organizations, which was hosting an event at Fishmonger’s Hall where the attack began on Friday.

Merritt worked as a course coordinator for Learning Together and Jones was a volunteer for the group, police said in a statement.

Jones’ parents called her a “funny, kind, positive influence at the center of many people’s lives,” in a statement shared by the police.

“Saskia had a great passion for providing invaluable support to victims of criminal injustice, which led her to the point of recently applying for the police graduate recruitment program, wishing to specialize in victim support,” the family said.

In another statement, Merritt’s family said he was “looking forward to building a future with his girlfriend, Leanne, and making a career helping people in the criminal justice system.”

Police identified Jack Merritt (left) and Saskia Jones as the victims of Friday's attack.  Police identified Jack Merritt (left) and Saskia Jones as the victims of Friday's attack.

His family criticized the Conservative government’s plans to review Britain’s judicial sentencing system in the aftermath of the attack.

“We know Jack would not want this terrible, isolated incident to be used as a pretext by the government for introducing even more draconian sentences on prisoners, or for detaining people in prison for longer than necessary,” they wrote.

Merritt and Jones were fatally stabbed by
Usman Khan, who was attending the event celebrating the five-year anniversary of Learning Together, police said. Three others, a man and two women, were also injured in the attack.

Police said Sunday that one of the injured has returned home, while the other two remain in stable condition in hospital.

Khan was shot dead by police after he left the building and went onto the north side of London Bridge, where a group of bystanders tackled him to the ground.

Merritt’s father, David Merritt, initially acknowledged his son’s death on a tweet Saturday.

“You were a beautiful spirit who always took the side of the underdog,” David Merritt wrote. He has since then deleted the message.

Friends of Merritt mourned him on social media. They described him as a caring young man, who was committed to social justice and equality, and who worked for a better justice system.

Mayor praised heroes who subdued attacker

The attacker was confronted by several people who sprayed liquid from a fire extinguisher and wielded an apparent narwhal tusk that was taken off the Fishmonger’s Hall.

The British Transport Police confirmed on Saturday that one of the bystanders was a plain clothes officer. They said the officer disarmed Khan of one of two knives he is believed to have had strapped onto his hand.

Acts of heroism emerge after London terror attackActs of heroism emerge after London terror attack

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said the group used anything they could find to stop the attacker from harming others.

“And I think what we should do is reflect on the fact that these people ignored all the advice they’re given, which is to run away from danger, to look after your own safety. And instead ran towards danger to make sure others were safe. And I’m just so incredibly proud as the mayor, and I think all of us should be proud of our fellow citizens,” the mayor told reporters on Saturday.

They mayor said a Londoner of Polish origin was among the group of people who intervened.

“We saw yesterday one example of the worst of humanity — the actions of this terrorist,” Sadiq Khan said. “But we saw many examples of the best of humanity. And when I say the best of us, I include EU citizens. And what we saw yesterday was ordinary citizens, including Londoners who are of Polish origin — he’s a Londoner — who acted in an extraordinary way. And I’m pretty proud of him.”

Political debate rages

The issue has turned into a political football in the run-up to the December 12 general election. Both the main party leaders accused previous governments for failures in the justice system.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who served as foreign secretary in the last Conservative government, said Sunday that it was “repulsive” that attacker Khan was out on early release after being convicted of terror offenses.

Speaking on the BBC’s Andrew Marr show, Johnson said: “I deplore the fact that this man was out on the streets.”

When Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was asked Sunday if he thought convicted terrorists should serve their full sentence on broadcaster, he said “not necessarily” and “it depends on the circumstances.”

He told Sky’s political show Sophy Ridge that an examination was needed of “how our prison services work and crucially on what happens when they’re released from prison,” noting that no probation service was involved in monitoring “this sort of person.”

Corbyn added that “prison ought to be a place where people are being put away… but also a place where rehabilitation takes place” saying there was a need to “properly fund the prison service.”

Khan had been released from prison last year with an ankle monitor after serving a less than half of a 16-year sentence.

In 2010, he was among a group arrested in London over an “al Qaeda-inspired plot” and was accused of planning to open a terrorist military training facility under the guise of a madrassa, or educational institution, on land in Kashmir that was owned by his family, court documents said.

This is what we know about London Bridge stabbing suspect Usman KhanThis is what we know about London Bridge stabbing suspect Usman Khan

Khan pleaded guilty in 2012 to the charges. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison for his role but was released in December 2018.

The sentencing judge called Khan and two others “more serious jihadis” than the rest of their group, adding that in his view they would remain a “significant risk” to the public, even after their sentence.

In order to adequately protect “the safety of the public,” the judge said Khan’s release on license could only be “decided upon, at the earliest, at the conclusion of the minimum term” in prison, and imposed an indeterminate sentence on his release.

Britain’s Parole Board said in a statement on Saturday that he appeared “to have been released automatically on license,” without a parole hearing.

A meeting of the government’s COBRA committee — which includes national security officials — took place on Sunday where Johnson was updated on Friday’s attack, PA Media reported, citing a Downing Street spokesman.

Schams Elwazer contributed to this report.