Trump impeachment

Senators voted on Feb. 5, 2020 to acquit President Trump on two articles of impeachment — abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. The vote ended the trial that began Jan. 21.

Want a quick overview of the case, those involved and key documents? Check out this NPR guide.

White House says it won’t participate in impeachment hearing
The White House declared Sunday it would not participate in the first impeachment hearings before the House Judiciary Committee as Democrats prepared to approve their report Tuesday making the case for President Trump’s removal from office.
House Judiciary Committee sets Dec. 4 impeachment hearing
The Judiciary hearing will come as the House intelligence committee is expected to submit a report compiling evidence of its probe into Trump’s dealings with Ukraine. The intelligence panel held two weeks of impeachment hearings this month.
Schiff says more impeachment hearings, witnesses possible
Democratic House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff said Sunday he won’t rule out the possibility of his committee undertaking more depositions and hearings in the impeachment inquiry of President Trump.
State Department files show Giuliani, Pompeo contact before Ukraine ambassador's exit
The talks took place near the time Giuliani and two of his associates were trying to push U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch out of her post in Kyiv. They pull Pompeo closer to the center of the crusade to oust Yovanovitch.
 Impeachment already a campaign issue in Craig’s 2nd District
As the House Intelligence Committee held hours of public impeachment hearings in Washington, D.C., this week, DFL U.S. Rep. Craig was facing a delicate balancing act back home in Minnesota’s 2nd District, where Republicans have targeted her for defeat in 2020.
Trump insists on debunked Ukraine theory, despite testimony
President Trump repeated his assertion that Ukrainians might have hacked the Democratic National Committee’s network in 2016 and framed Russia for the crime, a theory his own advisers have dismissed.
Democrats have wrapped their public case on impeachment. What comes next?
Members of Congress used marathon testimony over two weeks to try to convince Americans that they should impeach and remove President Trump. The United States Senate, at least, isn't sold. Now what?
Fact check: Trump, GOP claims on Ukraine corruption
President Trump and his GOP allies pressed a defense that he acted appropriately in withholding military aid to Ukraine out of concern over the country’s corruption and claimed the House impeachment hearings amounted to a rogue process. The claims don’t match up with known facts.
Impeachment hearing takeaways: A ‘domestic political errand’
The final testimony of an extraordinary week of impeachment hearings came from a former White House national security adviser who wrote the book on Vladimir Putin — literally — and a political counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine who overheard a pivotal conversation between President Trump and Gordon Sondland.