But Mr. Morrison, a Trump political appointee and a former longtime Republican congressional aide, resisted making the kind of sweeping, often damaging judgments about what was taking place that Democrats have heard from other witnesses, and Republicans emerged calling him the most favorable witness they had heard from so far.

In his opening remarks, obtained by The New York Times, he did not draw conclusions about Mr. Trump’s involvement in the pressure tactics, pointing back repeatedly to Mr. Sondland, whose involvement in Ukraine policy he said he “did not understand.” In subsequent testimony, he said he did not view the July phone call between Mr. Trump and Mr. Zelensky as illegal or improper, but he found it striking enough to ask the National Security Council’s chief lawyer, John Eisenberg, to review it, in part out of a concern that a summary might leak out.

He did so, Mr. Morrison testified, because he worried about how disclosure of what was said in the call “would play out in Washington’s polarized environment,” how it could affect bipartisan backing for Ukraine in Congress, and “how it would affect the Ukrainian perceptions of the U.S.-Ukraine relationship.”

Rather than ascribe a political motive to the pressure campaign against Ukraine, as some witnesses have, Mr. Morrison characterized the behavior he saw as bad foreign policy of the sort that could potentially squander a “once-in-a-generation opportunity” afforded by the election of Mr. Zelensky, who campaigned as a reformer who would crack down on rampant corruption.

“Ambassador Taylor and I had no reason to believe that the public release of the security sector assistance might be conditioned on a public statement reopening the Burisma investigation until my Sept. 1, 2019, conversation with Ambassador Sondland,” Mr. Morrison said. “Even then I hoped that Ambassador Sondland’s strategy was exclusively his own and would not be considered by the leaders of the administration and Congress, who understood the strategic importance of Ukraine to our national security.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/31/us/politics/morrison-testimony-impeachment.html

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, the first current White House official to be deposed in the House’s impeachment inquiry against President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump congratulates Washington Nationals on World Series win Trump hints that dog injured in al-Baghdadi raid will visit White House Vindman says White House lawyer moved Ukraine call to classified server: report MORE, is reportedly willing to testify publicly as the House shifts to public hearings.

Vindman, a Ukraine specialist on the National Security Council (NSC), has not yet been formally contacted by House impeachment investigators about public testimony but has said he is willing to, ABC News reported Thursday, citing a source familiar with his thinking.

In his testimony earlier this week, Vindman testified that upon hearing a call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in which Trump urged Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenPompeo says Trump-Zelensky call was ‘consistent’ with administration policy Alyssa Milano to co-host Biden fundraiser next month House panel advances resolution outlining impeachment inquiry MORE’s son Hunter Biden, he was concerned enough that he contacted a White House lawyer.

“I was concerned by the call. I did not think it was proper to demand that a foreign government investigate a U.S. citizen, and I was worried about the implications for the U.S. government’s support of Ukraine,” Vindman said in his opening statement.

“I realized that if Ukraine pursued an investigation into the Bidens and [natural gas company] Burisma, it would likely be interpreted as a partisan play, which would undoubtedly result in Ukraine losing the bipartisan support it has thus far maintained,” he added.

Vindman is the first witness to have been personally present for the call. He reportedly testified that he took his concerns to John Eisenberg, the NSC’s top lawyer, during a meeting that also included NSC attorney Michael Ellis. Eisenberg reportedly suggested moving the call transcript to a system for classified, sensitive national security information.

The House is seeking to depose Ellis and Eisenberg next week, although it is unclear whether they will comply, according to ABC.

The Hill has reached out to Vindman’s attorney for comment.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/468379-vindman-to-testify-publicly-in-house-impeachment-hearings

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Source Article from https://slate.com/technology/2019/10/how-much-the-2020-candidates-were-spending-on-twitter.html

The strongest Santa Ana wind event of the season so far helped fuel a number of brush fires burning around Southern California this week, including new blazes that ignited early Thursday.

Here’s a list of the incidents firefighters are battling.

Hillside Fire in San Bernardino: 

The Hillside Fire was reported about 1:40 a.m. Thursday along Highway 18 at Lower Waterman Canyon, in the northern end of the city.

  • Size: 200 acres
  • Containment: 50%
  • Evacuations: Areas north of 50th Street between Highway 18 and Mayfield Avenue
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: Eight structures, including six homes, damaged or destroyed.
  • Cause: Under investigation

46 Fire in Jurupa Valley: 

The 46 Fire broke out about 12:40 a.m. Thursday along the 5300 block of 46th Avenue. The flames spread to Riverside after jumping over the Santa Ana River.

  • Size: 300 acres
  • Containment: 15%
  • Evacuations: Lifted
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: At least three homes and two outbuildings
  • Cause: Possibly ignited by a car that caught fire during a pursuit

Easy Fire in Simi Valley

The Easy Fire broke out about 6:10 a.m. Wednesday near Easy Street and Los Angeles Avenue.

  • Size: 1,723 acres
  • Containment: 10%
  • Evacuations: Lifted
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: At least two structures
  • Cause: Under investigation

Getty Fire in Brentwood area: 

The Getty Fire was reported about 1:30 a.m. Monday in the 1800 block of North Sepulveda Boulevard.

  • Size: 745 acres
  • Containment: 39%
  • Evacuations: Tigertail Road at Deerbrook Lane to Chickory Lane, Stonehill Lane, Lindenwood Lane, Sky Lane, Canna Road, Chickory Lane, Bluestone Trace to Bluegrass Way, Bluestone Trace, Bluegrass Lane, Bluegrass Way
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: 12 homes destroyed, five homes damaged
  • Cause: Likely a tree branch that fell on some power lines during high winds

Hill Fire in Jurupa Valley:

The Hill Fire erupted in the area of Granite Hill Drive and Pyrite Street around 10 a.m. Wednesday

  • Size: 628 acres
  • Containment: 30%
  • Evacuations: Lifted
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: 2 homes damaged
  • Cause: Under investigation

Fire in Fullerton: 

The small blaze ignited just before 8 p.m. in the Orange County city of Fullerton in the area of Gilbert Street and Castlewood Drive.

  • Size: 11 acres
  • Containment: 100%
  • Evacuations: Lifted
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: 0
  • Cause: Investigators are trying to determine whether a flare gun found near the fire’s ignition sparked the blaze

Tick Fire in the Santa Clarita area: 

The Tick Fire broke out about 1:24 p.m. on Oct. 24 in the 31600 block of Tick Canyon Road in Agua Dulce and spread to Santa Clarita.

  • Size: 4,615 acres
  • Containment: 100%
  • Evacuations: Lifted
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: 29 total, including 24 homes; 46 total, including 40 homes
  • Cause: Under investigation

Dexter Fire in Riverside: 

The Dexter Fire was reported about 11:40 a.m. Wednesday in the area of Ladera Lane and Indian Hill Road and threatened homes in downtown Riverside.

  • Size: 30 Acres
  • Containment: 0%
  • Evacuations: Lifted
  • Structures Damaged/Destroyed: None reported
  • Cause: Under investigation

Source Article from https://ktla.com/2019/10/31/heres-a-list-of-wildfires-burning-around-southern-california/

Chicago teachers and City Hall reached a labor deal Thursday to end a bruising strike that kept kids out of school for 11 days, officials announced.

Teachers and students will be back in school on Friday. Both the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) announced the deal.

“This has been a long journey,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot tweeted Wednesday. “Unfortunately, I think there’s a lot of harm that has been done to our young people.”

Five of the missed 11 days will be made up, according to City Hall.

Class size was a sticking point in the prolonged labor talks, and the city has committed $35 million annually to reduce student-teacher ratio in K-12 classrooms, the union said.

Chicago’s 360,000 public school students comprise the nation’s third largest school system, trailing only New York and Los Angeles.

The teachers union represents more than 25,000 teachers and support staff. Separately, 7,500 members of the Service Employees International Union Local 73 were also out on strike, but had reached a deal on Wednesday.

“We feel like we achieved a lot of things,” CTU President Jesse Sharkey told reporters. “There are some things we didn’t achieve, but it’s not a day for photo-ops and victory laps.”

Lightfoot invited Sharkey to make a joint announcement, but the union president declined in a sign of the lingering bad blood.

“Frankly, our members are still out there on picket lines,” Sharkey said.

“They don’t need to see me smiling with the mayor when in fact what they need to see is we have a tentative agreement, we have a return to work agreement.”

CORRECTION (Oct. 31, 2019, 6:05 p.m. ET): A previous version of this article misspelled the first name of the president of the Chicago Teachers Union. He is Jesse Sharkey, not Jessee.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/chicago-mayor-announces-11-day-teacher-strike-has-ended-classes-n1074856

U.S. military forces have returned to eastern Syria weeks after President Trump ordered the complete withdrawal of American troops from the area. The move comes as the top Kurdish leader of a U.S.-backed militia accuses Turkey of “continuing its war” against the Kurds in Syria.

A U.S. military spokesman tweeted early Wednesday the Army National Guard’s 30th Armored Brigade Combat Team, known as “Old Hickory,” arrived in eastern Syria to protect oil fields the Pentagon does not want to see fall back into ISIS hands.

The Guard soldiers come from North Carolina, South Carolina, Ohio and West Virginia, according to a tweet by Col. Myles B. Caggins III, a U.S.-led coalition spokesman, in announcing the deployment.

The Guard soldiers come from North Carolina, South Carolina, Ohio and West Virginia, according to a tweet by Col. Myles B. Caggins III, a U.S.-led coalition spokesman in announcing the deployment.
(@OIRSpox)

Another tweet by the U.S. military’s Special Operations Joint Task Force in Iraq and Syria says the new U.S. forces are “repositioning” to “Deir ez Zor Syria to continue partnering w/ [Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF)] to defeat ISIS remnants, protect critical infrastructure, & deny ISIS access to revenue sources. @30thabct  mechanized forces provide infantry, maneuver, and firepower.”

PARENTS OF ISIS CAPTIVE KAYLA MUELLER BELIEVE DAUGHTER MAY STILL BE ALIVE

Roughly 500 Guard members will be part of the deployment to eastern Syria’s Deir ez Zor to protect the oil fields, according to officials.

A photo of the Guard unit arriving earlier this month to Kuwait were posted to a Pentagon website.

Earlier this month, the unit, including its MIAI Abrams main battle tanks, trained at Fort Bliss in Texas, according to the Pentagon:

It’s not clear if the tanks will also be deploying to eastern Syria, along with Bradley Fighting Vehicles in photos the Pentagon released when announcing the deployment to eastern Syria.

PENTAGON RELEASES VIDEO OF RAID THAT KILLED BAGHDADI

The announced deployment of more troops to Syria from the region follows a series of what some critics are calling contradictory statements from the White House over its Syria policy.

President Trump said last week in a tweet about Syria, “COMING HOME! We were supposed to be there for 30 days – That was 10 years ago. When these pundit fools who have called the Middle East wrong for 20 years ask what we are getting out of the deal, I simply say, THE OIL, AND WE ARE BRINGING OUR SOLDIERS BACK HOME, ISIS SECURED!”

But just two days prior to the tweet, in a White House speech announcing a cease-fire agreement between Turkey’s President Erdogan and U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters in northern Syria, the president said that not all U.S. troops would be coming home.

“A small number of U.S. troops will remain in the area where they have the oil,” President Trump said on Oct. 23.  “We’re going to be protecting it, and we’ll be deciding what we’re going to do with it in the future.”

INSIDE THE ISIS PRISON CAMP ‘LITTLE CALIPHATE’ BREEDING THE NEXT GENERATION OF JIHADIS

In a tweet from his recently created Twitter account, established after the cease-fire was announced, Kurdish Gen. Mazloum Abdi said Thursday:

“Turkey has not adhered to the ceasefire agreement with USA and is continuing its war. Turkey with Jihadists, began to occupying Christian villages and trying to break into Tall Tamir predominantly Assyriens, threatened with annihilation.  USA must fulfill its obligations.”

Protecting the oil could mean U.S. forces defending the oil not just from the 15,000 estimated ISIS fighters remains in Syria and Iraq, but from Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s troops, Russian and Iranian-backed forces as well.

Last year, Russian mercenaries along with “pro-Assad” forces advanced near the oil fields guarded by U.S. Special Operations forces along with their Kurdish allies.  When they began taking fire, the U.S. troops called in devastating air strikes from orbiting Apache helicopter and AC-130 gunships to annihilate the Russian troops, as then-Defense Secretary Jim Mattis later characterized the engagement to lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

The president also acknowledged in a recent statement that a small number of U.S. troops would remain at a garrison in southern Syria to block a well-known smuggling route used by Iranian-backed forces to move weapons from Iran to Damascus and Beirut.  ISIS is not known to inhabit the area.

The president said U.S. troops leaving Syria would, “stay in the region,” in the days since his abrupt order to pull all American forces out of northeast Syria after speaking to his Turkish counterpart on Oct. 6. Turkey launched an invasion of northeast Syria days later.  U.S. Special Operations forces ordered to retreat from the Syrian border felt they were abandoning and betraying their Kurdish allies.  The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) lost over 11,000 fighters battling ISIS over the past five years.

Despite President Trump wanting to pull American forces from the Middle East and end what he called “endless wars,” the Pentagon recently said just the opposite is happening.

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In a statement on Oct. 11 announcing roughly 2,000 more troops would be deploying to Saudi Arabia, the Pentagon said: “Since May, the Department of Defense has increased the number of forces by approximately 14,000” to the Middle East.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/us-military-returns-syria-oil-fields

Rep. Katie Hill, D-Calif., ripped into her political opponents on Thursday, denouncing what she called a “double standard” in politics that allegedly punished her while letting President Trump and others off the hook.

“I am leaving now because of a double standard,” she said. “I am leaving because I no longer want to be used as a bargaining chip. I’m leaving because I didn’t want to be pedaled by papers and blogs and websites, used by shameless operatives for the dirtiest gutter politics that I’ve ever seen — and the right-wing media to drive clicks and expand their audience by distributing intimate photos of me — taken without my knowledge, let alone my consent — for the sexual entertainment of millions.”

Hill claimed that she was leaving as men remained in Congress, the Oval Office, and the Supreme Court after being “credibly accused of acts of sexual violence” — a clear jab at Trump and Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

Hill announced her resignation on Sunday after a media firestorm was ignited by intimate details about her personal life. Pornographic photos of her surfaced online after a conservative news site — RedState — reported on an extramarital affair that Hill allegedly had with staffers.

WASHINGTON POST HIT FOR ASKING IF KATIE HILL SAGA WOULD HAVE HAPPENED TO A MAN

“I’m leaving because of a misogynistic culture that gleefully consumed my naked pictures, capitalized on my sexuality, and enabled my abusive ex to continue that abuse — this time, with the entire country watching,” she added while speaking on the House floor. She went on to cite “thousands” of threatening messages that made her fear for her life.

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Hill’s speech painted a picture in which misogynistic forces colluded to oust her from office.

“The forces of revenge by a bitter, jealous man, cyber exploitation, and sexual shaming that target our gender and a large segment of society that fears and hates powerful women have combined to push a young woman out of power and say that she doesn’t belong here,” she said, referring to herself.

“Yet a man, who brags about his sexual predation, who’s had dozens of women come forward to accuse him of sexual assault, who pushes policies that are uniquely harmful to women, and who has filled the court with judges who proudly rule to deprive women of the most fundamental right to control their own bodies — sits in the highest office of the land,” she said.

REP. KATIE HILL’S CLAIM THAT RIGHT-WING MEDIA FORCED HER RESIGNATION IS A ‘MYTH,’ GREG GUTFELD SAYS

Thursday, she said, was the first day she left her apartment since the photos surfaced. Hill also apologized for falling “short” of her goal to show “imperfect people” they belonged in Congress and “give a voice to the unheard in the halls of power.” She added apologies for “everyone who has supported and believed in me.” At one point, she said she hoped that one day little girls who looked up to her would be able to forgive her.

“The mistakes I’ve made and the people I’ve hurt that led to this moment will haunt me for the rest of my life,” she said.

As her last act in Congress, Hill voted for Trump’s impeachment “on behalf of the women of the United States of America.”

The House approved an impeachment resolution mostly along partisan lines on Thursday, after weeks of an official inquiry by House Democrats.

Hill indicated that she was leaving Congress so she wouldn’t distract from the impeachment process.

“I’m leaving because there is only one investigation that deserves the attention of this country,” she said.

KATIE HILL IS ‘VICTIM,’ SOME MEDIA CLAIM, FOCUSING ON LEAKED PHOTOS OVER REPORTED INAPPROPRIATE RELATIONSHIPS

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., defended Hill during her weekly press briefing on Thursday.

“Katie Hill’s decision to resign is her decision to resign,” said. “She is an absolutely outstanding young public servant — very smart, strategic, patriotic, loves our country, respected by her colleagues in the Congress for the work that she does,” Pelosi said.

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Pelosi added that the public humiliation Hill faced was “shameful” and that her rights may have been violated.

“Regardless of any errors in judgment that anyone may have made, it’s shameful that she’s been exposed to public humiliation by way of cyber exploitation … Countless women across America have been subjected to this type of harassment and abuse which is a profound violation of those women’s rights or any — men too– and human dignity,” she said.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/katie-hill-floor-speech-trump

The late ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in an undated picture released this week by the Pentagon.

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The late ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in an undated picture released this week by the Pentagon.

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The Islamic State Thursday confirmed the death of its founder and leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and announced a successor. The propaganda arm of ISIS also confirmed the death of another top ISIS official, its former spokesman.

In an audio message released through its central media operation, the group’s new spokesman announced that Baghdadi’s successor is a man named Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Quraishi. He is a figure largely unknown outside of ISIS circles and is hailed in the message as “Emir of the Believers” and “Caliph” of the group’s alleged caliphate.

In the announcement, both Baghdadi and former ISIS spokesman Abu al-Hassan al-Muhajir were praised as “martyrs.”

The ISIS announcement came four days after President Trump told a nationally televised news conference that U.S. forces brought “the world’s No. 1 terrorist leader to justice.”

It also came less than 24 hours after the head of the U.S. Central Command, Gen. Kenneth “Frank” McKenzie Jr., released video from the raid in northwestern Syria that resulted in the death of Baghdadi and five other ISIS fighters.

McKenzie offered fresh details on the operation against Baghdadi, and warned that U.S. officials are bracing for “some form of retribution attack.”

“We’re under no illusions that [ISIS is] going to go away just because we killed Baghdadi,” McKenzie told reporters at a Wednesday briefing.

He added that ISIS may be “a little disjointed” for a period. “They will be dangerous. We suspect they will try some form of retribution attack and we are postured and prepared for that,” McKenzie said.

The U.S.-only assault force was transported for about an hour by helicopter from a staging base in Syria to Idlib province, he said, roughly 4 miles from the border with Turkey. ISIS fighters, who McKenzie said “demonstrated hostile intent against U.S. forces,” were eliminated by two airstrikes from supporting U.S. helicopters.

From there, the U.S. forces surrounded Baghdadi’s compound, urging those inside to exit. Those who did included 11 children, McKenzie said.

Once the assault was completed, U.S. forces retrieved documents and electronics from the compound, which he described as “substantial.”

After departing, the military destroyed the compound in a precision strike to “ensure that it would not be a shrine or otherwise memorable in any way” McKenzie said, adding, “It looks pretty much like a parking lot with large potholes right now.”

In all, he said, six ISIS fighters died inside the compound, four women and two men, including Baghdadi.

McKenzie reiterated Trump’s recounting of the raid from Sunday, in which Baghdadi detonated a suicide vest, which collapsed the tunnel he retreated into. McKenzie said Baghdadi also killed two young children with him in the tunnel. Officials believe they were both “under 12.” Originally, officials said three children had been killed with Baghdadi.

McKenzie also said Baghdadi may have shot at oncoming U.S. forces before detonating his suicide vest.

“We believe that Baghdadi may have actually fired from his hole in his last moments,” McKenzie said.

McKenzie said he could not corroborate President Trump’s description of Baghdadi “whimpering and crying” as he fled in the tunnel.

“I’m not able to confirm anything else about his last seconds,” McKenzie said, adding, “I just can’t confirm that one way or another.”

McKenzie said the Defense Intelligence Agency was able to confirm identification of Baghdadi “beyond a shadow of a doubt.” Using DNA samples retrieved from the tunnel and comparing them with samples taken when the ISIS leader was detained at Iraq’s Camp Bucca prison in 2004 “produced a level of certainty that the remains belong to Baghdadi 1 in 104 septillion,” said McKenzie.

Baghdadi’s remains were buried at sea within 24 hours of his death, according to officials.

More details also emerged about the Belgian Malinois dog injured in the raid. He is a four-year veteran of the Special Operations Command and has participated in nearly 50 combat missions.

The dog was injured by live electrical cables inside the tunnel after Baghdadi blew himself up, Pentagon officials said. He’s been returned to duty.

According to a tweet from President Trump on Thursday, the dog, named Conan, “will be leaving the Middle East for the White House sometime next week!”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/10/31/775038966/isis-confirms-baghdadis-death-and-names-his-successor

CHICAGO — Thousands of Chicago’s public-school teachers will return to classrooms on Friday, ending a strike that left more than 300,000 students out of school for 11 days, the city’s mayor announced on Thursday.

A tentative contract deal between city officials and teachers in the nation’s third-largest school district resolved a tense standoff that had upended the lives of families all over the city and represented the biggest test to date of Chicago’s new mayor, Lori Lightfoot.

The walkout by the Chicago Teachers Union, which lasted longer than any schools strike in this city since 1987, was over an array of issues, beyond traditional questions over pay. The teachers called for more social workers, librarians and nurses in schools, smaller class sizes and protections for immigrant children. Over the last few weeks, teachers marched near schools and through the city’s downtown business district, as negotiations went on with city leaders.

In the end, the city said it had agreed to $35 million to reduce class sizes and hundreds of additional staff members by 2023. The city’s offer included a 16 percent salary increase over five years.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/31/us/chicago-cps-teachers-strike.html

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A goat grazes in South Pasadena last month as part of fire prevention efforts

A hungry herd of 500 goats has helped save the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library from the California wildfires.

In May, the library hired the goats to clear flammable scrub surrounding the complex as a preventative measure.

The goats ate the brush, creating a fire break that slowed the flames and gave firefighters extra time to react.

The library near Los Angeles was threatened by the Easy Fire, the latest in a spate of fires causing evacuations and power cuts across the state.

The caprine contractors included Vincent van Goat, Selena Goatmez and Goatzart. They helped save exhibits including an Air Force One jet and a piece of the Berlin Wall.

“We were told by one of the firefighters that they believe that fire break made their job easier,” Melissa Giller, a library spokeswoman, told Reuters.

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Goat grazing is one way of removing highly flammable brush

The goats were hired from a local company – 805 Goats – to clear around 13 acres of land.

Scott Morris started the company last November and charges around $1,000 (£771) per acre of land.

As California continues to have more wildfires, Mr Morris says he will need to double his herd to meet demand.

Another large southern California institution – the Getty Museum in Los Angeles – was also protected this week by scrub-clearing work carried out by staff.

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Goats from a ranch near the Reagan Library were also rescued from the Easy Fire

What has happened to animals caught in the path of fires?

Ranchers and volunteers have been scrambling to evacuate farm animals, carrying them away on trailers, dropping them somewhere safe, and then turning around to rescue more.

In some cases, when the flames move too quickly for trailer rescues, the animals are simply let loose in the hope they can escape on their own and be recovered later.

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People attempt to load a frightened horse into a trailer in Canyon Country

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Ranches north of Los Angeles were evacuated as the Easy Fire spread

Along with their owners, pets have been displaced from their homes too, with many animals killed or lost.

The Pet Rescue and Reunification Facebook group – dedicated to helping reunite pets with their owners – is flooded with pictures of animals missing amid the fires.

Several shelters under threat of fires have also had to evacuate animals.

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A resident of Canyon Country evacuates her home with her pets

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Budweiser and his owners, Sheila and John Pereira, are staying in a trailer in a Walmart parking lot after fleeing the Kincade fire

Of the more than ten active wildfires raging in California, the Kincade Fire in the north of the state is the largest, with more than 76,000 acres burned so far.

The governor has declared a state-wide emergency.

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Llamas stand in smoke from the Kincade Fire

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Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50248549

In court Thursday, Kupperman’s attorney Charles Cooper, who also represents Bolton, did not rule out the possibility that Bolton could be added to the lawsuit if he is subpoenaed. House investigators have asked Bolton to testify before two committees next week, but Cooper said Bolton has not yet received a subpoena.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/legal-issues/john-boltons-former-deputy-asks-judge-to-resolve-conflicting-demands-for-house-impeachment-testimony/2019/10/31/6119ae8c-f9b0-11e9-8190-6be4deb56e01_story.html

Once the voting began, the House chamber buzzed with activity. Ms. Pelosi could be seen on the floor counting the votes as they came in and tracking Democrats until the very last minute, leaving nothing to chance.

In a statement just after the resolution was adopted, Stephanie Grisham, the White House press secretary, said that the House had approved a process that was “unfair, unconstitutional and fundamentally un-American.”

“The president has done nothing wrong,” she said, “and the Democrats know it.”

Though it is not a perfect comparison to votes taken to authorize impeachment inquiries into Mr. Clinton and President Richard M. Nixon, Thursday’s outcome underscored the depth of partisan polarization now gripping American politics. Democrats delivered a show of unity that just weeks ago seemed improbable, with even many moderate lawmakers who are facing difficult re-election races in conservative-leaning districts voting in favor of moving forward.

Whereas the vote against Mr. Nixon registered only four objections and 31 members of the president’s party endorsed the inquiry into Mr. Clinton, this time, not a single Republican defected.

Two Democrats, Representatives Collin C. Peterson of Minnesota and Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, voted against the measure, while Representative Justin Amash of Michigan, the House’s lone independent, supported it.

The inquiry remains a high-stakes gamble for Democrats just over a year from the 2020 balloting, as their presidential contenders — some of whom would act as jurors in a Senate trial should the House vote to impeach — are already deep into their campaigns to try to defeat Mr. Trump. Public polls in recent weeks have suggested a narrow majority of the nation backs the inquiry and believes Mr. Trump’s actions warrant scrutiny. But support for Mr. Trump being impeached and removed appears weaker, and there has been no sign that the president’s narrow but durable base of supporters has been troubled by the accusations.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/31/us/politics/house-impeachment-vote.html

A second senior member of the National Security Council told House impeachment investigators Thursday that he immediately expressed concerns to his superiors after President Trump pressed Ukraine to investigate his political rivals, according to a source familiar with his testimony.

Tim Morrison, who testified behind closed doors a day after he abruptly quit as Trump’s top advisor for Russian and European affairs, was the second official to say he had complained after he heard Trump ask Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, for a “favor” during a controversial phone call on July 25.

Morrison, the first White House political appointee to appear, echoed the testimony of Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman, another White House expert on Ukraine, who told the panel on Tuesday that he was so alarmed after the call that he went to the NSC lead counsel to complain.

Morrison’s testimony has been widely anticipated since August, when a CIA officer assigned to the White House filed an anonymous whistleblower complaint that said multiple officials at the White House had said Trump was “using the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. election.”

Morrison’s name also appeared more than a dozen times in testimony last week by William Taylor, the acting U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, that appeared to contradict Trump’s repeated denials of using foreign policy for personal gain.

Taylor told impeachment investigators that Trump had frozen nearly $400 million in congressionally approved military aid to Kyiv unless Zelensky publicly promised to investigate Trump’s political rival Joe Biden and his son Hunter. He said Trump also was holding up a long-promised meeting with Zelensky until the Ukrainian leader agreed.

Taylor said Morrison had also expressed concerns about a July 10 meeting between Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, and Andriy Yermak, a top aide to Zelensky. Taylor said that Sondland had told Yermak that the military aid would not be released until Zelenskiy committed to investigate Burisma, a Ukrainian gas company that once employed Biden’s son.

“I was alarmed by what Mr. Morrison told me about the Sondland-Yermak conversation,” Taylor testified. “This was the first time I had heard that the security assistance — not just the White House meeting — was conditioned on the investigations.”

Taylor testified that Morrison told him he had a “sinking feeling” after learning about a Sept. 7 conversation that Sondland had with Trump.

“According to Mr. Morrison, President Trump told Ambassador Sondland that he was not asking for a quid pro quo,” Taylor testified. “But President Trump did insist that President Zelenskiy go to a microphone and say he is opening investigations of Biden and 2016 election interference, and that President Zelenskiy should want to do this himself. Mr. Morrison said that he told Ambassador Bolton and the NSC lawyers of this phone call between President Trump and Ambassador Sondland.”

Known as a hawk in foreign policy circles, Morrison stepped down from his NSC post on Wednesday. A senior administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Morrison has been considering leaving the administration for “some time.”

Morrison, who had worked for numerous Republican members of Congress, was brought into the White House in July 2018 by national security advisor John Bolton to work on arms controls issues, but later shifted to the portfolio that focuses on Russia and Europe.

Bolton stepped down in September after clashing with Trump over the president’s policies on North Korea, Syria and other issues. House impeachment investigators have asked him to testify on Nov. 7, but it’s unclear if Bolton will comply without a subpoena.

Both Bolton and Morrison were deeply involved the in-house squabble about the back-channel diplomacy with Ukraine undertaken by Trump’s personal attorney, Rudolph W. Giuliani. that now is the focus of the impeachment inquiry.

Republican lawmakers will be hard-pressed to dismiss Morrison, formerly a longtime Republican staffer on Capitol Hill. Over the last two decades, he has worked for Rep. Mark Kennedy (R-Minn.) and Sen. Jon Kyl, (R-Ariz.) and as a senior GOP staffer on the House Armed Services Committee, including for nearly four years when it was chaired by Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-Texas).

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-10-31/house-impeach-vote-morrison-20191031

WASHINGTON – The House of Representatives is scheduled to vote Thursday on a Democratic resolution mapping out rules for public hearings in the impeachment investigation of President Donald Trump, after weeks of Republicans criticizing the inquiry for holding closed-door meetings in the basement of the Capitol.

Also on Thursday, the trio of committees investigating Trump’s dealings with Ukraine have another private deposition with a National Security Council official. Timothy Morrison, whose departure from the NSC as senior director for Europe and Russia was announced on the eve of his testimony, was described by another witness in the House impeachment inquiry as having a “sinking feeling” after learning the U.S. was withholding military aid for Ukraine while urging an investigation of Trump’s political rival former Vice President Joe Biden.

Morrison’s testimony is expected to begin in the morning. The House is expected to debate the resolution in the morning and vote on it as part of a series beginning about 10:30 a.m.

The vote will be the first of the full House under the formal impeachment inquiry and will put moderate lawmakers from both parties under scrutiny heading into the 2020 election. The resolution formalizes the public phase of the investigation with hearings and evidence-sharing with the president’s counsel, even as Republicans continue to criticize the process as a “sham.”

Mitt Romney: a solitary GOP voice battling Trump for the soul of the Republican Party

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., declared a formal impeachment inquiry Sept. 24 amid reports Trump urged Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate his political rival, Biden, while withholding military aid. Trump has called the inquiry a partisan “witch hunt” and White House counsel Pat Cipollone notified Pelosi Oct. 8 that the administration wouldn’t cooperate for lack of a full House vote.

The resolution charts a public phase of the investigation. Six committees have been investigating Trump for a variety of reasons, including possible abuse of power and obstruction of justice: Financial Services, Foreign Affairs, Intelligence, Judiciary, Oversight and Reform, and Ways and Means.

Provisions in the resolution allow Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Rep. Devin Nunes of California, the panel’s top Republican, to each question witnesses for up to 90 minutes or delegate their time to staffers before rank-and-file lawmakers each ask questions for five minutes. Republicans on the Intelligence and Judiciary committees could subpoena witnesses and documents, and if the chairman objected, Republicans could ask for a committee vote.

The resolution: House resolution outlines public phase of impeachment inquiry, gives GOP subpoena powers

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U.S. and Ukraine relations go further back than the now infamous phone call between Trump and Zelensky. We explain their relationship.
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The Intelligence Committee and other panels would provide reports to the Judiciary Committee, which would draft possible articles of impeachment. At Judiciary hearings, the president’s counsel would be able to participate by receiving evidence and staff reports, questioning witnesses, submitting additional evidence and being invited to offer a concluding presentation.

But if the administration refuses to make witnesses or documents available to the committees, Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler could deny requests from the president’s counsel to call or question witnesses.

“This is a serious moment for our nation,” said Nadler, D-N.Y.  “This committee is committed to executing its part of the House’s ongoing impeachment investigation with the highest fealty to the Constitution.”

The provisions weren’t enough to appease concerns among Republicans, who worried about the lack of additional resources for committees participating in the inquiry and that the Intelligence Committee might not pass along all the confidential evidence it has gathered to the Judiciary Committee.

“The Soviet-style process that Speaker Pelosi and Adam Schiff have been conducting behind closed doors for weeks now has been rotten to the core,” said Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the second-ranking Republican in the House.

The White House denounced the measure in a statement by press secretary Stephanie Grisham, saying the resolution continues the impeachment “scam” without allowing “any due process for the president.”

Testimony from NSC aide

The Intelligence Committee has been taking depositions for weeks about Ukraine and Morrison, who is slated to testify Thursday, was mentioned repeatedly in the House testimony Oct. 22 of Bill Taylor, the top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine. Morrison is leaving the NSC soon after more than a year of service, according to a senior administration official.

Taylor described how NSC and State Department officials learned bit by bit about the back-channel efforts of Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, to pressure Ukraine into investigating former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter.

Taylor said he asked Morrison during a call Aug. 22 whether U.S. policy toward Ukraine had changed. Morrison replied “it remains to be seen,” but said the “president doesn’t want to provide any assistance at all,” according to Taylor.

“That was extremely troubling to me,” said Taylor, who had warned Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that he would resign if the U.S. didn’t strongly support Ukraine.

The conversation with Morrison was sandwiched between Trump’s July 25 call to  Zelensky, when the president urged an investigation of the Bidens, and the White House release of a summary of the call Sept. 25, when Taylor learned of its details.

‘You cannot make up my life’: Hillary Clinton’s ties to impeachment inquiries against three presidents

Three key House committees – Foreign Affairs, Intelligence, and Oversight and Reform – are investigating how Trump withheld nearly $400 million in military aid during the summer while also urging Zelensky to investigate Biden.

Democrats contend the effort could be an impeachable abuse of power. But House Republicans have accused Democrats of selectively leaking snippets of testimony from the closed-door sessions to make the president look bad. Trump has vigorously defended his authority to urge the investigation of corruption and called the inquiry a partisan “witch hunt.”

Morrison succeeded Fiona Hill, the former NSC senior director for Europe and Russia, who resigned during the summer. She told lawmakers Oct. 14 that National Security Adviser John Bolton said he wasn’t part of “whatever drug deal” that Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, and acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney were “cooking up,” according to reports about her testimony.

Bolton reportedly referred to Giuliani as “a hand grenade who’s going to blow everybody up,” according to Hill. Bolton told her to notify NSC lawyer John Eisenberg about a July 10 White House meeting of officials dealing on Ukraine.

Taylor picked up the thread with details about how national-security and diplomatic officials learned about the results of pressuring Ukraine to begin investigations.

On Sept. 1, Zelensky met with Vice President Mike Pence in Warsaw. Sondland also met there with Andriy Yermak, an assistant to Zelensky, according to Taylor.

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Morrison described Sondland telling Yermak that the military aid wouldn’t come until Zelensky committed to investigate Burisma, the Ukraine energy company that employed Hunter Biden as a board director, according to Taylor.

“This was the first time I had heard that the security assistance – not just the White House meeting – was conditioned on the investigations,” Taylor said.

Taylor alerted Alexander Danyliuk, Ukraine’s national security adviser, that the military assistance was “all or nothing” because the funding would expire with the end of the U.S. fiscal year Sept. 30.

On Sept. 2, Morrison met with Danyliuk in Warsaw and later told Taylor that the Ukrainian expressed concern about the losing U.S. support.

On Sept. 7, Morrison said he had a “sinking feeling” after a conversation with Sondland, according to Taylor. Trump told Sondland he wasn’t asking for a “quid pro quo,” but insisted that “Zelensky go to a microphone and say he is opening investigations of Biden and 2016 election interference,” Taylor said.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/10/31/trump-impeachment-inquiry-house-vote-rules-public-hearings/2453705001/

Rep. Matt Gaetz filed a complaint against the Democratic chairman of the House Intelligence Committee in a move that could usher an end to a decadeslong bipartisan ethics détente.

The Florida Republican sent a letter to the 10-member bipartisan panel led by Rep. Ted Deutch, calling on the committee to investigate Rep. Adam Schiff over the California lawmaker’s handling of impeachment proceedings against President Trump.

It’s rare for a lawmaker to file an ethics complaint against another member, in part because lawmakers are fearful of sparking retaliatory complaints.

House lawmakers have seldom filed ethics complaints, particularly across party lines, after the two sides agreed to end a partisan ethics war that consumed Congress more than two decades ago.

Since then, ethics investigations have typically been self-initiated by the committee or referred by an independent outside panel, the Office of Congressional Ethics, which was created by the House and can field complaints from groups and individuals not serving in Congress.

Gaetz wants the panel to investigate Schiff’s opening statement at the only public impeachment hearing so far, in which Schiff delivered a parody account of President Trump’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, which is at the heart of the impeachment proceedings.

Gaetz also wants Ethics to investigate Schiff’s past statements in which Schiff claimed to have knowledge of evidence Trump colluded with Russia ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

A two-year investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller did not charge Trump with colluding with the Russians, although Democrats say the Mueller report includes evidence of collusion.

And Gaetz wants the Ethics panel to look into Schiff’s decision to block Gaetz and other Republicans from the closed-door impeachment proceedings taking place in the Capitol basement.

Gaetz has tried to gain entry into the proceedings, which are limited to the House Intelligence, Foreign Relations, and Oversight and Government Reform Committees. The House parliamentarian has ruled that Gaetz and other lawmakers who do not sit on the three invited panels cannot attend the closed-door proceedings.

Gaetz said he should be allowed into the proceedings because he is a member of the House Judiciary Committee, which has handled impeachment investigations in the past.

“Chairman Schiff has abused his authority and seems to believe that the rules of the House of Representatives do not apply to him,” Gaetz said in a statement. “We cannot have a multi-tiered justice system in the United States or in the Congress. His egregious behavior must change immediately.”

The Ethics panel is unlikely to open a formal subcommittee hearing into Schiff’s actions.

But the panel will at least have to review the complaint and issue a statement, even if it dismisses it. His complaint will undoubtedly ratchet up the partisan discord in the House and could make it more tempting for Democrats to file complaints against GOP lawmakers they believe have broken House rules.

In his letter to the Ethics panel, Gaetz urged the committee, after it investigates the matter, “to make all appropriate referrals to the Department of Justice, for further investigation and prosecution.”

A Schiff spokesman hasn’t yet responded to a request for comment about the complaint.

Schiff’s opening statement, delivered during a Sept. 26 public hearing about the Ukraine call, generated bipartisan criticism.

“We’ve been very good to your country,” Schiff said, pretending to read the call transcript. “Very good. No other country has done as much as we have. But you know what? I don’t see much reciprocity here. I hear what you want. I have a favor I want from you, though. And I’m going to say this only seven times, so you better listen good. I want you to make up dirt on my political opponent, understand? Lots of it. On this and on that.”

Gaetz is the subject of a House ethics inquiry that was first filed with the Office of Congressional Ethics by an outside Democratic political action committee that accused him of using his Twitter account and role in Congress to threaten Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/congress/ethics-war-brewing-gaetz-files-complaint-against-schiff

Facebook is facing increasing blowback over its policy that allows politicians to lie in ads on its platform, and critics have been urging the company to stop running political ads. So far, the company hasn’t backed down. But on Wednesday, fellow social media company Twitter announced it will stop all political advertising on its platform worldwide.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey made the announcement in a series of tweets on Wednesday afternoon. “We believe political message reach should be earned, not bought,” Dorsey wrote.

In other words, politicians can still organically tweet but they can’t pay to promote those tweets as advertisements.

Dorsey laid out Twitter’s reasoning, explaining that political messages earn reach when people decide to follow or retweet an account. “Paying for reach removes that decision, forcing highly optimized and targeted political messages on people. We believe this decision should not be compromised by money,” he wrote.

He warned that internet advertising’s power “brings significant risks to politics” — a dig at Facebook, which doesn’t fact-check ads from politicians.

“We’re well aware we’re a small part of a much larger political advertising ecosystem,” Dorsey concluded. “Some might argue our actions today could favor incumbents. But we have witnessed many social movements reach massive scale without any political advertising. I trust this will only grow.”

Twitter’s definition of a political ad will align with how it defines political content, a spokesman for the company told Recode.

This puts pressure on other social media companies to make a move

Twitter is a relatively small player in the online political advertising space, which is largely dominated by Facebook and Google. Nevertheless, its decision puts pressure on competitors that are already under heavy scrutiny over their policies. It’s probably not by accident that Twitter announced its decision at the same time Facebook announced its quarterly earnings.

Facebook specifically has been widely criticized for its policy of not fact-checking ads run by politicians. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has taken a hard line on his defense of Facebook’s approach, sticking by it in the face of criticism from reporters, lawmakers, and his own employees, who are all pressuring him to rethink his decision.

The potential ramifications of Facebook’s policies have been evidenced by Democratic efforts to test its limits. First, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) ran an ad falsely claiming Zuckerberg had endorsed President Donald Trump, then first-term Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) got Zuckerberg to admit at a House hearing that he would “probably” let her run ads saying Republicans supported the Green New Deal. And then, a progressive strategist named Adriel Hampton filed to run for California governor as part of a stunt campaign, saying the plan was to run fake ads. Facebook decided to clamp down on him, adding more confusion into the mix.

In a story I published earlier in the day on Wednesday, I took a broader look at the implications of Facebook’s policy, which set off a controversy when the company refused to take down a Trump ad making false claims about former Vice President Joe Biden:

But taking down the ad would have created two problems for Facebook. First, it would set a precedent that Facebook is responsible for policing every false political ad on its platform. That would be a challenging but not impossible task. The company has effectively addressed terrorist content and gotten better at combating election interference. It could undertake similar efforts on fake political ads.

The second and bigger complication: taking down the ad could also have caused just as much controversy as leaving it up. Trump and his supporters would likely have cried foul. Facebook and other social media companies are already dogged by unfounded accusations by Republicans that their algorithms contain anti-conservative bias, and they have done a lot of legwork to try to prove they’re not.

To be sure, none of this is to say that Twitter has resolved all criticisms and questions about the health of its platform, or even how it moderates political tweets that aren’t paid advertisements. Some people continue to call for Twitter to censor or take down Trump’s account when he tweets out particularly threatening or offensive content that seemingly violates the platform’s rules.

However, Twitter’s decision to end political ads is a PR win for Twitter, even if it doesn’t actually make that much of a difference in the world of fake political online ads. Beyond that, it’s a savvy move that puts more heat on Zuckerberg and Facebook — and a lot of people are watching.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/recode/2019/10/30/20940612/twitter-political-ads-announcement-jack-dorsey-facebook

A coalition of conservative groups has filed an ethics complaint against Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy Pelosi50 Cent meets with Pelosi, lawmakers on Capitol Hill Democrats raise stakes with impeachment vote Overnight Energy: House passes bill to prohibit mining near Grand Canyon| Union says EPA refuses to renegotiate contract | Climate protesters occupy Pelosi’s office over California fires MORE (D-Calif.) claiming that she has usurped authority from the executive branch and “weaponized” the impeachment process.

In a complaint to the Office of Congressional Ethics, 40 conservative groups led by Jenny Beth Martin of Tea Party Patriots Action wrote to the board’s chairman, David Skaggs, arguing that Pelosi was carrying out an unconstitutional, partisan investigation.

The letter also argued that a vote scheduled for Thursday on a House resolution laying out the process and some procedures for impeachment was “insufficient” to dispel their worries about a partisan investigation.

“Speaker Pelosi’s conduct is an encroachment across the constitutionally-mandated separation of powers. She has no business examining or investigating the president’s legitimate exercise of his authority to determine the foreign and national security policy of the United States,” the complaint stated.

“In launching her ‘official’ impeachment inquiry without benefit of a vote of the full House of Representatives and without indicating anything remotely qualifying as ‘treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors’ that is the subject of the inquiry, Speaker Pelosi has weaponized impeachment,” the complaint continued.

“She and her Democratic colleagues are using the impeachment process as a weapon of partisan political battle, rather than as the means to defend the Constitution our Framers meant it to be,” the complaint added.

In a statement to The Hill, Martin said that “the genie cannot be put back into the bottle” after Democrats began the impeachment inquiry without a formal House vote.

“Speaker Pelosi’s latest impeachment gambit — at last, a vote of the full House! — is merely a continuation of her ongoing roughshod-running,” said Martin.

“The genie cannot be put back in the bottle. All that ‘evidence’ that has been gathered before the casting of a single vote is tainted by the corrupt, secret process in which it was gathered. It is poisoned, and must be discarded for the sake of fairness,” Martin added.

Pelosi’s office did not immediately return a request for comment.

Allies of President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump congratulates Washington Nationals on World Series win Trump hints that dog injured in al-Baghdadi raid will visit White House Vindman says White House lawyer moved Ukraine call to classified server: report MORE have argued that the impeachment process is being conducted in an insufficiently bipartisan manner as Democrats bring in a steady stream of witnesses to testify about pressure from Trump on Ukraine to launch investigations into former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenPompeo says Trump-Zelensky call was ‘consistent’ with administration policy Alyssa Milano to co-host Biden fundraiser next month House panel advances resolution outlining impeachment inquiry MORE and the Democratic National Committee.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/468204-40-conservative-groups-sign-ethics-complaint-against-pelosi