BBC: Trump dismissal process changes everything today

The investigation into the American president's dismissal will exit closed doors. For more than a month, the process that could end by voting in the Senate for the removal of Donald Trump from the position of president has been covered with mystery. Greater discoveries have come from leaks [...]
For more than a month, the process that could end by voting in the Senate for the removal of Donald Trump from the position of president has been covered with mystery.
Larger discoveries have come from information leaks, anonymous media sources, and volume transcripts.
Everything changes today.
These are the four things we need to think about while camera lights are going through Congress Intelligence Committee.
Are the witnesses mortgaged?
There's not very likely to be many surprises in giving evidence by three witnesses scheduled this week.
U.S. Ambassador Bill Taylor, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent and former Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch have already appeared in the hearings behind closed doors, and transcripts from their testimony have already been issued to the public, writes the BBC, translates Periscopi.
The bombs, for anyone who sees them in that form, have already exploded.
Claims that Trump had traded his political interests in exchange for military aid have already been exposed.
If things go according to plan for the Democrats, the three witnesses will just repeat their previous answers just this time, with the public watching them. It may be important how witnesses speak rather than what they speak. Do they look like a mortgage?
Public opinion, meanwhile, has become very divided over the event of Trump's dismissal on party grounds. Republicans continue to strongly oppose this process, while Democrats believe President Trump has committed serious violations of the call he made to Wolfymr Zelensky of Ukraine. /Periscope










