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.

Republicans ask for whistleblower and Hunter Biden to testify in impeachment inquiry
Republican Rep. Devin Nunes said that calling these witnesses would help ensure the impeachment probe "treats the President with fairness." Democrats are unlikely to approve the entire request.
White House broke from 'normal process' handling Trump-Ukraine call, witness said
A top White House attorney placed records about President Trump's now-famous Ukraine call in a system few could access, Alexander Vindman testified. His is one of two transcripts released Friday.
Mulvaney stands up Democrats in impeachment probe
Democrats subpoenaed Mulvaney late Thursday as the White House signaled that he wouldn't appear. The White House instructed its officials not to comply with the investigation, which is looking at President Donald Trump's dealings with Ukraine.
Ukraine pressure campaign undermined 'rule of law,' top state dept. official says
"Politically related prosecutions ... undermine the rule of law," George Kent said in his deposition. The transcript of his interview with impeachment investigators was released on Thursday.
Ambassador: Giuliani, acting in Trump's interest, tried to cast Biden in 'bad light'
In the new public phase of the impeachment inquiry, William Taylor's is the fifth transcript of testimony released. Democratic lawmakers called his closed-door deposition a game-changer.