Members of the House Intelligence Committee chaired by Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) will have 24 hours to view a draft report on the Democrat-led impeachment probe before a vote on Tuesday night, Politico reported late Nov. 30.
If the draft is approved on Dec. 3, which is expected if members vote according to party lines, it will proceed to the House Judiciary Committee. That committee is scheduled to hold its first impeachment hearing on Dec. 4.
The hearing, titled “The Impeachment Inquiry into President Donald J. Trump: Constitutional Grounds for Presidential Impeachment” will address the historical and constitutional basis of impeachment and the examine the intent and understanding the framers of the Constitution had when they used the term “high crimes and misdemeanors.”
Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) said earlier that he hoped Trump and his counsel will participate in the Judiciary Committee hearing (pdf).
“I have also written to President Trump to remind him that the Committee’s impeachment inquiry rules allow for the president to attend the hearing and for his counsel to question the witness panel,” Nadler wrote. “The Committee looks forward to your participation in the impeachment inquiry as the Committee fulfills its constitutional duties.”
Trump criticized the timing of the hearings that will coincide with his visit to London to attend a summit of NATO leaders.
The ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee is Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.).
On Nov. 21, Collins wrote to Nadler to request that Schiff turn over all evidence, unredacted, seen in the impeachment inquiry into Trump.
“In light of how Chairman Schiff is conducting the impeachment process and pursuant to Section III of H. Res. 660, all materials in the custody of the Intelligence Committee should be transmitted immediately to this Committee,” he wrote.
“Without all documents and materials considered by the Intelligence Committee, this Committee will be unable to fulfill its obligation to the American people to carefully consider a matter as dire as removing a duly elected president.”
The Dec. 4 hearing follows closed-door depositions by the Intelligence, Oversight, and Foreign Affairs committees, and two weeks of public hearings in front of the Intelligence Committee which focused on Trump’s approach to foreign policy in Ukraine. The president denies any wrongdoing.
With reporting by Jack Phillips.
From The Epoch Times